Case Information
*1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA VOLTAGE PICTURES, LLC,
Plaintiff,
Civil Action No. 10-0873 (BAH) v. Judge Beryl A. Howell
DOES 1-5,000,
Defendants. MEMORANDUM OPINION
Pending before the Court are motions to dismiss, quash, and for protective orders filed by 119 putative defendants. These individuals have yet to be named as defendants in this case, but *2 claim to have received notices from their Internet Service Providers (hereinafter “ISPs”) that plaintiff Voltage Pictures, LLC seeks their identifying information in connection with allegations in the Complaint that certain IP addresses used a file-sharing program called BitTorrent to download and distribute illegally the plaintiff’s copyrighted movie The Hurt Locker . These 119 putative defendants have filed motions and letters seeking to prevent disclosure of their identifying information and otherwise to secure dismissal from the lawsuit. For the reasons set forth below, the putative defendants’ motions to quash, dismiss, and for protective orders are denied.
I. BACKGROUND
On May 24, 2010, plaintiff Voltage Pictures, LLC filed a Complaint against unnamed individuals who allegedly used a file-sharing protocol called BitTorrent to illegally infringe plaintiff’s copyright in the motion picture The Hurt Locker . Compl. ¶ 3, ECF No. 1. Given that the defendants in this case were unidentified at the time the plaintiff filed its Complaint, on June 25, 2010, the Court granted the plaintiff leave to subpoena ISPs to obtain identifying information for the putative defendants. Minute Order dated June 25, 2010 (Urbina, J.).
Since the Court approved expedited discovery, ISPs have provided identifying information listed); Randy L. Morton, ECF No. 97 (No IP address listed); Morris Carrejo, ECF No. 99 (No IP address listed); Charles Ellsworth, ECF No. 100 (No IP address listed); Nanci Lam, represented by Michael S. Lee, Esq, ECF No. 101 (No IP address listed); Anita M. Dorrance, ECF No. 104 (No IP address listed); Syed Mobeen, ECF No. 105 (No IP address listed); Alan Stowers, ECF No. 107 (No IP address listed); Shani Myers, ECF No. 108 (No IP address listed); Darryl Godfrey, ECF No. 109 (No IP address listed); Justin Solem, ECF No. 112 (No IP address listed); Adam Owensby, ECF No. 118 (No IP address listed); Kathryn Lanier, ECF No. 119 (No IP address listed); Erik E. Johnston, ECF No. 121 (No IP address listed); Leigh Norris, ECF No. 126 (No IP address listed); Michael Scott Davis, ECF No. 127 (No IP address listed); Matthew Alan O’Connell, ECF No. 128 (No IP address listed); Kathleen Gonzales, ECF No. 129 (No IP address listed); Neel N. Patel, ECF No. 130 (No IP address listed); Nancy Schwarz, ECF No. 131 (No IP address listed); Matthew J. Selck, ECF No. 132 (No IP address listed); Von R. Arnst, ECF No. 133 (No IP address listed); Freightmen International, ECF No. 140 (No IP address listеd); Adrian Taylor Tuia, ECF No. 134 (No IP address listed); Guntars Rizijs, ECF No. 137 (No IP address listed); Chris Queen, ECF No. 138 (No IP address listed). The Court therefore has no way of verifying that these individuals are indeed potential parties in this lawsuit. Regardless, however, the defenses and arguments they assert are identical to those proffered by other putative defendants.
for the putative defendants in response to the plaintiff’s subpoenas on a rolling basis. [2] Prior to providing the plaintiff with a putative defendant’s identifying information, however, the ISPs sent notices to the putative defendants informing them of their right to challenge release of their information in this Court. [3] On April 4, 2011, the Court directed the plaintiff, inter alia , to dismiss the putative defendants that it did not intend to sue. Order Granting In Part Pl.’s Mot. Extension of Time to Name and Serve, Apr. 4, 2011, ECF No. 120. On April 15, 2011, the plaintiff voluntarily dismissed 557 putative defendants for whom it had received identifying information but did not intend to sue in this Court. Pl.’s Notice of Voluntary Dismissal, Apr. 15, 2011, ECF No. 125. None of the putative defendants with pending motions were dismissed. Id.
The Court is now presented with motions or letters from 119 putative defendants who seek to prevent disclosure of thеir identifying information or otherwise obtain dismissal from the lawsuit: thirty-three putative defendants have filed motions in which they generally deny using BitTorrent to download and distribute the plaintiff’s movie, [4] seventy-one putative defendants have *4 filed motions to quash under on F ED . R. C IV . P. 45(c)(3), seven putative defendants have filed (IP address listed: 75.165.182.92); Ben Hatch, ECF No. 38 (No IP address listed); William C. Cook, Sr., ECF No. 41 (IP address listed: 71.217.225.229); Raghbir Singh, ECF No. 42 (No IP address listed); Arthur B. Cutting, ECF No. 44 (No IP address listed); LaMarr M. Jones, ECF No. 46 (No IP address listed); Richard DeHart, ECF No. 47 (IP address listed: 70.59.194.89); Byron Lee, ECF No. 48 (IP address listed: 96.40.190.149.00); Michael Koenig, ECF No. 54 (No IP address listed); Shey Davis, ECF No. 61 (No IP address listed); Judy Collins, ECF No. 69 (No IP address listed); Nick Hartmann, ECF No. 73 (No IP address listed); Khaled Hamed, ECF No. 103 (IP address listed: 68.184.152.100); Syed Mobeen, ECF No. 105 (No IP address listed); Chelsea Reitzner, ECF No. 106 (IP address listed: 24.183.109.103); Alan Stowers, ECF No. 107 (No IP address listed); Darryl Godfrey, ECF No. 109 (No IP address listed); Justin Solem, ECF No. 112 (No IP address listed); Aleksandr Baga, ECF No. 113 (IP address listed: 24.17.133.177); Adam Owensby, ECF No. 118 (No IP address listed); Chris Queen, ECF No. 138 (No IP address listed); Kaylin Werth, ECF No. 139 (IP address listed: 71.89.27.95); William White, ECF No. 141 (IP address listed: 66.190.77.95); Rita Shostak, ECF No. 149 (No IP address listed). See Janyth D. Girard, ECF No. 11 (IP address listed: 71.32.60146); Margaret Wenzek, ECF No. 15 (No IP address
listed); Audrey Kalblinger, ECF No. 16 (No IP address listed); John Doe, ECF No. 18 (IP address listed: 67.40.214.85); John Doe, ECF No. 18 (IP address listed: 216.160.106.134); John Doe, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Nicole G. Lipson, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Kenneth G. Kupke, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Delmar R. Towler, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Richard L. Stellah, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); JoNeane Key, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Darcie Dikeman, ECF No. 21 (No IP address listed); Jason Brittan, ECF No. 28 (No IP address listed); Sherry Porter, ECF No. 29 (No IP address listed); Michael B. Parker, ECF Nos. 31, 110 (No IP address listed); Jay R. Frydenlund, ECF No. 33 (IP address listed: 71.38.47.225); Debora L. Andrews, ECF No. 34 (IP address listed: 174.31.89.186); Millwee Holler-Kanaga, ECF No. 36 (IP address listed: 75.165.182.92); Ben Hatch, ECF No. 38 (No IP address listed); William C. Cook, Sr., ECF No. 41 (IP address listed: 71.217.225.229); A. Turner, ECF No. 45 (IP address listed: 216.161.89.109); Michael Koenig, ECF No. 54 (No IP address listed); Cheryl A. Lobo, ECF No. 56 (No IP address listed); Randall J. Azbill, Sr., ECF No. 57 (No IP address listed); John T. Krayer, ECF No. 58 (No IP address listed); Joseph M. Luria, ECF No. 59 (No IP address listed); Cameron J. Kennedy, ECF No. 60 (No IP address listed); David Allan Doll, ECF No. 62 (No IP address listed); Matthew Cohen, ECF No. 64 (IP address listed: 98.117.43.70); Joseph M. Orovic, ECF No. 65 (No IP address listed); Rowena K. Cruz, ECF No. 66 (No IP address listed); Miriam Adelson, ECF No. 67 (No IP address listed); Antonio R. Hinton, ECF No. 68 (No IP address listed); Judy Collins, ECF No. 69 (No IP address listed); Kenneth Kantorowicz, ECF No. 70 (IP address listed: 98.127.67.128); Jomy Joseph, ECF No. 74, (No IP address listed); Jonathan T. Payne, ECF No. 75 (No IP address listed); Carman I. Goodrich, ECF No. 76 (No IP address listed); John C. Jacobson, ECF No. 77 (No IP address listed); Ruth Shih, ECF No. 78 (No IP address listed); Sean E. Ringle, ECF No. 79 (No IP address listed); Simone J. Johnson, ECF No. 80 (No IP address listed); Jordan C. Neptune, ECF No. 81 (No IP address listed); Warren M. Gehl, ECF No. 82 (No IP address listed); Eric M. Miller, ECF No. 83 (No IP address listed); Richard T. Holbrook, II, ECF No. 84 (No IP address listed); Darren Choong Sik Hng, ECF No. 85 (No IP address listed); Todd D. Merrifield, ECF No. 86 (No IP address listed); Amelia Cardenas, ECF No. 95, (No IP address listed); Amanda J. Quast, ECF No. 96 (No IP address listed); Randy L. Morton, ECF No. 97 (No IP address listed); Nanci Lam, represented by Michael S. Lee, Esq, ECF No. 101 (No IP address listed); Samuel Neuenschwander, ECF No. 102 (IP address listed: 96.3.75.15); Khaled Hamed, ECF No. 103 (IP address listed: 68.184.152.100); Anita M. Dorrance, ECF No. 104 (No IP address listed); Aleksandr Baga, ECF No. 113 (IP address listed: 24.17.133.177); Adam Owensby, ECF No. 118 (No IP address listed); Erik E. Johnston, ECF No. 121 (No IP address listed); Leigh Norris, ECF No. 126 (No IP address listed); Michael Scott Davis, ECF No. 127 (No IP address listed); Matthew Alan O’Connell, ECF No. 128 (No IP address listed); Kathleen Gonzales, ECF No. 129 (No IP address listed); Neel N. Patel, ECF No. 130 (No IP address listed); Nancy Schwarz, ECF No. 131 (No IP address listed); Matthew J. Selck, ECF No. 132 (No IP address listed); Von R. Arnst, ECF No. 133 (No IP address listed); Aaron Tukey, ECF No. 136 (IP address listed: 68.116.170.119); Freightmen International, ECF No. 140 (No IP address listed); J. McCarthy, ECF No. 148 (IP address listed: 72.73.239.68); Rita Shostak, ECF No. 149 (No IP address listed).
motions to dismiss asserting that the putative defendants are improperly joined, [6] and forty-two putative defendants have filed motions to dismiss based on lack of personal jurisdiction. [7] Additionally, thirty-five putative defendants have filed motions for protective orders. [8] For the reasons stated below, the Court denies all of these motions.
*6 II. MOTIONS TO QUASH UNDER FEDERAL RULE OF CIVIL PROCEDURE 45
Seventy-one putative defendants have filed motions to quash the plaintiff’s subpoenas issued to ISPs for the putative defendants’ identifying information. These motions assert three arguments: First, the putative defendant filing the motion did not engage in the alleged illegal conduct and the plaintiff should therefore be prevented from obtaining the putative defendant’s identifying information. Second, the subpoena should be quashed because it “requires disclosure of privileged or other protected matter” under F ED . R. C IV . P. 45(c)(3)(A)(iii). Third, the plaintiff’s subpoenas subject the putative defendant filing the motion to an undue burden under F ED . R. C IV . P. 45(c)(3)(A)(iv). All of these arguments are unavailing.
Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 45(c), the Court must quash a subpoena when,
inter alia,
it “requires disclosure of privileged or other protected matter, if no exception or
waiver applies” or “subjects a person to undue burden.” F ED . R. C IV . P. 45(c)(3)(A)(iii)-(iv). A
general denial of engaging in copyright infringement is not a basis for quashing the plaintiff’s
subpoena. It may be true that the putative defendants who filed motions and letters denying that
they engaged in the alleged conduct did not illegally infringe the plaintiff’s copyrighted movie,
and the plaintiff may, based on its evaluation of their assertions, decide not to name these
individuals as parties in this lawsuit. On the other hand, the plaintiff may decide to name them as
defendants in order to have an opportunity to contest the merits and veracity of their defenses in
this case. In other words, if these putative defendants are named as defendants in this case, they
may deny allegations that they used BitTorrent to download and distribute illegally the plaintiff’s
movie, present evidence to corroborate that defense, and move to dismiss the сlaims against
them. A general denial of liability, however, is not a basis for quashing the plaintiff’s subpoenas
and preventing the plaintiff from obtaining the putative defendants’ identifying information. That
would deny the plaintiff access to the information critical to bringing these individuals properly
*7
into the lawsuit to address the merits of both the plaintiff’s claim and their defenses.
See
Achte/Neunte Boll Kino Beteiligungs GMBH & Co, KG v. Does 1-4,577
,
Thirty putative defendants urge the Court to quash the plaintiff’s subрoenas based upon
their privacy interests. Rule 45(c)(3)(A)(iii) instructs a Court to quash a subpoena if it “requires
disclosure of privileged or other protected matter.” F ED . R. C IV . P. 45(c)(3)(A)(iii). This rule,
however, does not apply here. The Court recognizes that the putative defendants’ First
Amendment right to anonymous speech is implicated by disclosure of their identifying
information.
See Sony Music Entm’t, Inc. v. Does 1-40
,
Finally, the argument that the plaintiff’s subpoenas subject putative defendants to an undue burden is also unavailing. Putative defendants essentially argue that the plaintiff’s subpoenas require them to litigate in a forum in which they should not be subject to personal jurisdiction, which causes them hardship. As explained more fully infra , the putative defendants’ personal jurisdiction arguments are premature at this time because they have not been named as parties to this lawsuit. Given that they are not named parties, the putative defendants are not required to respond to the allegations presented in the plaintiff’s Complaint or *9 otherwise litigate in this district. The plaintiff has issued subpoenas to the putative defendants’ ISPs, not to the putative defendants themselves. Consequently, the putative defendants face no obligation to produce any information under the subpoenas issued to their respective ISPs and cаnnot claim any hardship, let alone undue hardship. [11]
The plaintiff’s subpoenas requesting the putative defendants’ identifying information do not subject the putative defendants to an undue burden nor is the plaintiff’s request for the information outweighed by any privacy interest or First Amendment right to anonymity. Moreover, a general denial of liability is not a proper basis to quash the plaintiff’s subpoenas. Accordingly, the putative defendants’ motions, under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 45(c)(3), to quash the subpoenas are denied.
III. MOTIONS FOR PROTECTIVE ORDERS
Thirty-five putative defendants have filed motions for protective orders seeking to protect
their identities from being disclosed to the plaintiff.
[12]
Rule 26(c) provides that a court may “issue
*10
an order to protect a party or person from annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue
burden or expense.” F ED . R. C IV . P. 26(c)(1). Such protective orders may forbid disclosure
altogether, or, among other measures, “limit[ ] the scope of disclosure or discovery to certain
matters.” F ED . R. C IV . P. 26(c)(1)(A) and (D). “[A]lthough Rule 26(c) contains no specific
reference to privacy or to other rights or interests that may be implicated, such matters are
implicit in the broad purpose and language of the Rule.”
In re Sealed Case (Medical Records)
,
As elaborated above, the putative defendants are not subject to the plaintiff’s subpoenas,
and therefore do not face any “annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden or
expense” from the plaintiff’s discovery request.
See
F ED . R. C IV . P. 26(c)(1). To the extent that
the putative defendants seek protective orders to prevent disclosure of private identifying
information, the Court has held that the putative defendants’ First Amendment rights to
anonymity in the context of their BitTorrent activity is minimal and outweighed by the plaintiff’s
need for the putative defendants’ identifying information in order to protect its copyrights.
See
Call of the Wild Movie, LLC v. Does 1-1,062
, No. 10-cv-455,
IV. MOTIONS TO DISMISS BASED ON IMPROPER JOINDER IP address listed); J. McCarthy, ECF No. 148 (IP address listed: 72.73.239.68). The Court directed the Clerk to file these motions under seal pending resolution of their motions for protective orders. The Court deniеs these motions in the instant Memorandum Opinion, and, as reflected in the Order accompanying this Memorandum Opinion, the Clerk is directed to unseal the ECF docket entries: 56-60, 62, 64-68, 73-86, 94-98, 108, 119, 121, 129, 130-134, and 148. Many of the putative defendants state that they seek protective orders pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
37. The Court assumes, however, that they seek protective orders under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(c), and construes their motions accordingly.
Seven putative defendants argue that they should be dismissed from the lawsuit because the plaintiff has improperly joined them with other putative defendants. [14] The putative defendants’ argument that they are improperly joined may be meritorious should they be named as defendants in this action. At this stage in the litigation, however, when discovery is underway to learn identifying facts necessary to permit service on Doe defendants, joinder, under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 20(a)(2), of unknown parties identified only by IP addresses is proper. As discussed below, this conclusion is further supported by the allegаtions set forth in the Complaint, which sufficiently establishes a prima facie case of infringement of plaintiff’s copyright by users of the same file-sharing software program that operates through simultaneous and sequential computer connections and data transfers among the users.
At the outset, the Court notes that the remedy for improper joinder under Federal Rule of
Civil Procedure 21 is not dismissal of the action.
[15]
F ED . R. C IV . P. 21 (“Misjoinder of parties is
not a ground for dismissing an action.”). Improper joinder may be remedied by “drop[ping]” a
party and severing claims against that party. F ED . R. C IV . P. 21 (“On motion or on its own, the
Court may at any time, on just terms, add or drop a party.”). This would simply create separate
actions containing the same claims against the same putative defendants.
See Bailey v. Fulwood
,
*12
No. 10-463,
In addition to providing efficiencies for expedited discovery on jurisdictional issues,
defendants may be properly joined in one action when claims arise from the same transaction or
occurrence or series of transactions or occurrences; and any question of law or fact in the action
is common to all defendants. F ED . R. C IV . P. 20(a)(2);
see also Montgomery v. STG Int’l, Inc.
,
In the present case, the plaintiff has met all the requirements for permissive joinder under
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 20(a)(2). The first requirement is that claims must “aris[e] out
of the same transaction, occurrence, or series of transactions or occurrences.” F ED . R. C IV . P.
20(a)(2)(A). This essentially requires claims asserted against joined parties to be “logically
related.”
Disparte
,
The plaintiff alleges that the putative defendants used the BitTorrent file-sharing protocol to distribute illegally the plaintiff’s motion picture. Compl., ¶ 3. This file-sharing protocol “makes every downloader also an uploader of the illegally transferred file(s). This means that every . . . user who has a copy of the infringing copyrighted material on a torrent network must necessarily also be a source of download for that infringing file.” Id. The plaintiff further asserts that the “nature of a BitTorrent protocol [is that] any seed peer that has downloaded a file prior to the time a subsequent peer downloads the same file is automatically a source for the subsequent peer so long as that first seed peer is online at the time the subsequent peer downloads a file.” Id. at ¶ 4.
Based on these allegations, the plaintiff’s claims against the putative defendants are
logically related at this stage in the litigation. According to the plaintiff, each putative defendant
is a possible source for the plaintiff’s motion picture, and may be responsible for distributing this
copyrighted work to the other putative defendants, who are also using the same file-sharing
protocol to copy and distribute the same copyrighted work.
See Disparte
,
Some courts in other jurisdictions have granted motions by putative defendants for
severance in analogous copyright infringement cases against unknown users of peer-to-peer file-
sharing programs for failure to meet the “same transaction or occurrence test” in Rule 20(a)(2).
Those courts have been confronted with bare allegations that putative defendants used the same
peer-to-peer network to infringe copyrighted works and found those allegations were insufficient
for joinder.
See, e.g., IO Grp., Inc. v. Does 1-19
, No. 10-03851,
The plaintiff has provided detailed allegations about how the BitTorrent technology
differs from other peer-to-peer file-sharing programs and necessarily engages many users
simultaneously or sequentially to operate.
See Columbia Pictures Indus. v. Fung,
No. 06-5578,
At least one court has not been persuaded that allegations of copyright infringement by
users of BitTorrent satisfy the requirement of Rule 20.
See, e.g., Lightspeed v. Does 1-1000,
No.
*16
10-cv-5604,
The second requirement for proper joinder under Rule 20(a)(2) is that the plaintiff’s
claims against the putative defendants must contain a common question of law or fact. F ED . R. C IV . P. 20(a)(2)(B);
see also Disparte
,
In addition to the two requirements for permissive joinder under Rule 20(a)(2), the Court
must also assess whether joinder would prejudice the parties or result in needless delay.
See
Lane,
The Court reaches this conclusion cognizant of the significant burdens on the court and
judicial economy posed by the sheer number of putative defendants that the plaintiff seeks to join
in a single lawsuit. These concerns are legitimately shared by other courts across the country that
are confronting copyright infringement cases involving allegations of illegal file-sharing of
copyrighted works by unprecedented numbers of Doe defendants, and the multitude of motions
from interested parties that such suits engender.
Lightspeed,
This Court similarly must evaluate judicial economy and the administrative burdens of
managing such cases, set against the challenge broad-scale allegedly infringing activity
represents for the copyright owners. Copyright owners’ efforts to protect their copyrighted
works through Doe actions are “costly[,] time consuming[,] . . . cumbersome and expensive.”
In
re Charter Commc’ns, Inc., Subpoena Enforcement Matter
,
Joinder in this case at this stage of the litigation is proper. Should the putative defendants
be named in the Complaint, they may raise the argument that they are improperly joined, under
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 20, and move to sеver, under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
21. Severance prior to that point, as numerous other courts both in and outside this District have
held, is premature.
See, e.g., Achte/Neunte Boll Kino Beteiligungs GMBH & Co, KG v. Does 1-
4,577
, No. 10-cv-00453, ECF No. 34 (D.D.C. July 2, 2010) (Collyer, J.);
West Bay One, Inc. v.
Does 1-1653
, No. 10-cv-00481, ECF No. 25 (D.D.C. July 2, 2010) (Collyer, J.);
Arista Records
LLC v. Does 1-19
,
V. MOTIONS TO DISMISS BASED ON LACK OF PERSONAL JURISDICTION
Forty-two putative defendants argue that they should be dismissed from the lawsuit because the Court lacks personal jurisdiction over them. To support this argument, they supply *20 affidavits or declarations attesting that they do not reside, transact or solicit business, or otherwise have sufficient contacts in the District of Columbia. These asserted facts would become relevant for the Court’s consideration when and if these individuals are named as parties in this action. They cannot be dismissed, under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(2), from a lawsuit to which they are not parties.
Moreover, to establish personal jurisdiction, the Court must examine whether jurisdiction
is applicable under the District of Columbia’s long-arm statute, D.C. C ODE § 13-423, and must
also determine whether jurisdiction satisfies the requirements of due process.
See GTE New
Media Servs. Inc. v. BellSouth Corp.
,
In cases where a party’s contacts with the jurisdiction are unclear and the record before
the court is “plainly inadequate,” courts have allowed for a discovery period within which to
gather evidence to support jurisdiction.
See GTE New Media Servs.
,
Cable & Wireless PLC
,
Although the putative defendants assert that they do not have sufficient contacts with this
jurisdiction to justify personal jurisdiction, the Court, as well as the plaintiff, has limited
information to assess whether these jurisdictional defenses are valid and to evaluate possible
alternate bases to establish jurisdiction.
See, e.g., London-Sire Records, Inc.
, 542 F. Supp. 2d at
181 (“Even taking all of the facts in [the putative defendant’s] affidavit as true, it is possible that
the Court properly has personal jurisdiction.”);
Humane Soc’y of the United States v.
Amazon.com, Inc.
, No. 07-623,
VI. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the putative defendants have failed to demonstrate that the plaintiff’s subpoenas issued to ISPs should be quashed, that protective orders are warranted, or *23 that the putative defendants should otherwise be dismissed from this case for improper joinder or a lack of personal jurisdiction. Accordingly, the following motions to quash the plaintiff’s subpoenas, motions to be dismissed from the lawsuit, and motions for protective orders are denied: Jeff Kowalski, ECF No. 9 (No IP address listed); Janyth D. Girard, ECF No. 11 (IP address listed: 71.32.60146); Mark Richards, ECF No. 12 (IP address listed: 216.175.86.12); Matt Robinson, listed as John Doe, ECF No. 12 (IP address listed: 97.120.111.248); Blake Leverett, ECF No. 12 (IP address listed: 92.112.148.232); Salil Kadam, ECF No. 12 (IP address listed: 174.22.224.236);Margaret Wenzek, ECF No. 15 (No IP address listed); Audrey Kalblinger, ECF No. 16 (No IP address listed); Delmar R. Towler, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); JoNeane Key, ECF No. 18 (No IP addrеss listed); Kenneth G. Kupke, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); John Doe, ECF No. 18 (IP address listed: 216.160.106.134); John Doe, ECF No. 18 (IP address listed: 67.40.214.85); John Doe, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Richard L. Stelloh, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Louis R. Carpenter, ECF No. 18 (IP address listed: 97.127.24.109); Nicole G. Lipson, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Darcie Dikeman, ECF No. 21 (No IP address listed); John Doe, ECF No. 23 (IP address listed: 93.36.141.178); Jason Brittan, ECF No. 28 (No IP address listed); Sherry Porter, ECF No. 29 (No IP address listed); Mary Jo Elgie, ECF No. 30 (IP address listed: 98.118.130.44); James Kane, ECF No. 32 (No IP address listed); Jay R. Frydenlund, ECF No. 33 (IP address listed: 71.38.47.225); Debora L. Andrews, ECF No. 34 (IP address listed: 174.31.89.186); Jan H. Slater, ECF No. 35 (IP address listed: 71.21.25.157); Millwee Holler-Kanaga, ECF No. 36 (IP address listed: 75.165.182.92); Sara Sherwood, ECF No. 37 (IP address listed:00:13:10:b9:71:a5); Ben Hatch, ECF No. 38 (No IP address listed); Sandra Dockery, ECF No. 39 (No IP address listed); Colin Quennell, ECF No. 40 (No IP address listed); William C. Cook, Sr., ECF No. 41 (IP address listed: 71.217.225.229); *24 Raghbir Singh, ECF No. 42 (IP address listed: 174.31.245.30); Corbin Swan, ECF No. 43 (No IP address listed); Arthur B. Cutting, ECF No. 44 (IP address listed: 174.26.9.140); A. Turner, ECF No. 45 (IP address listed: 216.161.89.109); LaMarr M. Jones, ECF No. 46 (No IP address listed); Richard DeHart, ECF No. 47 (IP address listed: 70.59.194.89); Byron Lee, ECF No. 48 (IP address listed: 96.40.190.149.00); Adam Delgado, ECF No. 49 (IP address listed: 24.177.13.76); Karen Eiriz, ECF No. 50 (No IP address listed); Lucy A. Marsh, ECF No. 53 (No IP address listed); Michael Koenig, ECF No. 54 (IP address listed:173.71.1.125); Cheryl A. Lobo, ECF No. 56 (No IP address listed); Randall J. Azbill, Sr., ECF No. 57 (No IP address listed); John T. Krаyer, ECF No. 58 (No IP address listed); Joseph M. Luria, ECF No. 59 (No IP address listed); Cameron J. Kennedy, ECF No. 60 (No IP address listed); Shey Davis, ECF No. 61 (No IP address listed); David Allan Doll, ECF No. 62 (No IP address listed); Jonathan D. Coleman, ECF No. 63 (No IP address listed); Matthew Cohen, ECF No. 64 (IP address listed: 98.117.43.70); Joseph M. Orovic, ECF No. 65 (No IP address listed); Rowena K. Cruz, ECF No. 66 (No IP address listed); Miriam Adelson, ECF No. 67 (No IP address listed); Antonio R. Hinton, ECF No. 68 (No IP address listed); Judy Collins, ECF No. 69 (No IP address listed); Kenneth Kantorowicz, ECF No. 70 (IP address listed: 98.127.67.128); Aran Bedarian, ECF No. 71 (IP address listed: 71.84.245.56); James Verdin, ECF No. 72 (IP address listed: 97.127.116.204); Nick Hartmann, ECF No. 73 (No IP address listed); Jomy Joseph, ECF No. 74 (No IP address listed); Jonathan T. Payne, ECF No. 75 (No IP address listed); Carman I. Goodrich, ECF No. 76 (No IP address listed); John C. Jacobson, ECF No. 77 (No IP address listed); Ruth Shih, ECF No. 78 (No IP address listed); Sean E. Ringle, ECF No. 79 (No IP address listed); Simone J. Johnson, ECF No. 80 (No IP address listed); Jordan C. Neptune, ECF No. 81 (No IP address listed); Warren M. Gehl, ECF No. 82 (No IP address listed); Eric M. Miller, ECF No. 83 (No IP *25 address listed); Richard T. Holbrook, II, ECF No. 84 (No IP address listed); Darren Choong Sik Hng, ECF No. 85 (No IP address listed); Todd D. Merrifield, ECF No. 86 (No IP address listed); Michael Carter, ECF No. 88-1 (IP address listed: 72.174.15.52); Chang Myers, listed as Jane Doe, ECF No. 88-2 (IP address listed: 173.71.142.170); Leanne Ferguson fka Leanne Brogdоn, ECF No. 94 (No IP address listed); Amelia Cardenas, ECF No. 95 (No IP address listed); Amanda J. Quast, ECF No. 96 (No IP address listed); Randy L. Morton, ECF No. 97 (No IP address listed); David Raines, listed as John Doe, ECF No. 98 (IP address listed: 68.118.179.157); Morris Carrejo, ECF No. 99 (No IP address listed); Charles Ellsworth, ECF No. 100 (No IP address listed); Nanci Lam, represented by Michael S. Lee, Esq, ECF No. 101 (No IP address listed); Samuel Neuenschwander, ECF No. 102 (IP address listed: 96.3.75.15); Khaled Hamed, ECF No. 103 (IP address listed: 68.184.152.100); Anita M. Dorrance, ECF No. 104 (No IP address listed); Syed Mobeen, ECF No. 105 (No IP address listed); Chelsea Reitzner, ECF No. 106 (IP address listed: 24.183.109.103); Alan Stowers, ECF No. 107 (No IP address listed); Shani Myers, ECF No. 108 (No IP address listed); Darryl Godfrey, ECF No. 109 (IP address listed: 75.132.186.254); Michael B. Parker, ECF No. 110 (No IP address listed); Jeff Scherer, ECF No. 111 (IP address listed: 184.96.91.86); Justin Solem, ECF No. 112 (IP address listed: 66.188.193.94); Aleksandr Baga, ECF No. 113 (IP address listed: 24.17.133.177); Donna Lynk, ECF No. 115 (IP address listed: 68.10.91.194); Adam Ceschin, ECF No. 117 (IP address listed: 97.120.111.248); Adam Owensby, ECF No. 118 (No IP address listed); Kathryn Lanier, ECF No. 119 (No IP address listed); Erik E. Johnston, ECF No. 121 (No IP address listed); Leigh Norris, ECF No. 126 (No IP address listed); Michael Scott Davis, ECF No. 127 (No IP address listed); Matthew Alan O’Connell, ECF No. 128 (No IP address listed); Kathleen Gonzales, ECF No. 129 (No IP address listed); Neel N. Patel, ECF No. 130 (No IP address *26 listed); Nancy Schwarz, ECF No. 131 (No IP address listed); Matthew J. Selck, ECF No. 132 (No IP address listed); Von R. Arnst, ECF No. 133 (No IP address listed); Adrian Taylor Tuia, ECF No. 134 (No IP address listed); Mary Woods, ECF No. 135 (IP address listed: 75.137.118.90); Aaron Tukey, ECF No. 136 (IP address listed: 68.116.170.119); Guntars Rizijs, ECF No. 137 (No IP address listed); Chris Queen, ECF No. 138 (No IP address listed); Kaylin Werth, ECF No. 139 (IP address listed: 71.89.27.95); Freightmen International, ECF No. 140 (No IP address listed); William White, ECF No. 141 (IP address listed: 66.190.77.95); J. McCarthy, ECF No. 148 (IP address listed: 72.73.239.68); Rita Shostak, ECF No. 149 (No IP address listed). An Order consistent with this Memorandum Opinion will be entered. /s/ Beryl A. Howell
DATE: MAY 12, 2011 BERYL A. HOWELL United States District Judge
Notes
[1] Eighty-one individuals have filed motions representing that they are putative defendants in the instant lawsuit, but have not provided the IP addresses listed in the plaintiff’s Complaint that are allegedly associated with their computer use. See Jeff Kowalski, ECF No. 9 (No IP address listed); Margaret Wenzek, ECF No. 15 (No IP address listed); Audrey Kalblinger, ECF No. 16 (No IP address listed); JoNeane Key, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); John Doe, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Nicole G. Lipson, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Kenneth G. Kupke, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Delmar R. Towler, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Richard L. Stellah, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Darcie Dikeman, ECF No. 21 (No IP address listed); Jason Brittan, ECF No. 28 (No IP address listed); Sherry Porter, ECF No. 29 (No IP address listed); Michael B. Parker, ECF Nos. 31, 110 (No IP address listed); James Kane, ECF No. 32 (No IP address listed); Ben Hatch, ECF No. 38 (No IP address listed); Sandra Dockery, ECF No. 39 (No IP address listed); Colin Quennell, ECF No. 40 (No IP address listed); Raghbir Singh, ECF No. 42 (No IP address listed); Arthur B. Cutting, ECF No. 44 (No IP address listed); LaMarr M. Jones, ECF No. 46 (No IP address listed); Adam Delgado, ECF No. 49 (No IP address listed); Karen Eiriz, ECF No. 50 (No IP address listed); Lucy A. Marsh, ECF No. 53 (No IP address listed); Michael Koenig, ECF No. 54 (No IP address listed); Cheryl A. Lobo, ECF No. 56 (No IP address listed); Randall J. Azbill, Sr., ECF No. 57 (No IP address listed); John T. Krayer, ECF No. 58 (No IP address listed); Joseph M. Luria, ECF No. 59 (No IP address listed); Cameron J. Kennedy, ECF No. 60 (No IP address listed); Shey Davis, ECF No. 61 (No IP address listed); David Allan Doll, ECF No. 62 (No IP address listed); Jonathan D. Coleman, ECF No. 63 (No IP address listed); Joseph M. Orovic, ECF No. 65 (No IP address listed); Rowena K. Cruz, ECF No. 66 (No IP address listed); Miriam Adelson, ECF No. 67 (No IP address listed); Antonio R. Hinton, ECF No. 68 (No IP address listed); Judy Collins, ECF No. 69 (No IP address listed); Aran Bedarian, ECF No. 71 (No IP address listed); Nick Hartmann, ECF No. 73 (No IP address listed); Jomy Joseph, ECF No. 74 (No IP address listed); Jonathan T. Payne, ECF No. 75 (No IP address listed); Carman I. Goodrich, ECF No. 76 (No IP address listed); John C. Jacobson, ECF No. 77 (No IP address listed); Ruth Shih, ECF No. 78 (No IP address listed); Sean E. Ringle, ECF No. 79 (No IP address listed); Simone J. Johnson, ECF No. 80 (No IP address listed); Jordan C. Neptune, ECF No. 81 (No IP address listed); Warren M. Gehl, ECF No. 82 (No IP address listed); Eric M. Miller, ECF No. 83 (No IP address listed); Richard T. Holbrook, II, ECF No. 84 (No IP address listed); Darren Choong Sik Hng, ECF No. 85 (No IP address listed); Todd D. Merrifield, ECF No. 86 (No IP address listed); Leanne Ferguson fka Leanne Brogdon, ECF No. 94 (No IP address listed); Amelia Cardenas, ECF No. 95 (No IP address listed); Amanda J. Quast, ECF No. 96 (No IP address
[2] Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 4(m), the plaintiff was required to name and serve defendants by September 21, 2010, which is the date within 120 days of filing its original Complaint. On September 24, 2010, the plaintiff requested additional time to name and serve the defendants because it had not received fully compliant responses from ISPs to the plaintiff’s subpoenas. Pl.’s Mot. for Extension of Time to Name and Serve, Sept. 24, 2010, ECF No. 10. The Court granted the plaintiff a 180 day extension on September 28, 2010, which allowed the plaintiff to continue discovery until March 27, 2010. Minute Order, Sept. 28, 2010 (Urbina, J.). On April 4, 2010, the Court extended the plaintiff’s time to name and serve putative defendants to June 13, 2011. ECF No. 120.
[3] The Court’s Order approving expedited discovery did not expressly order the plaintiff or ISPs to send notices to putative defendants before their identifying information was released in response to the plaintiff’s subpoenas. Plaintiff’s counsel, however, represented in a related case that a notice was attached to all subpoenas issued to ISPs for identifying information in cases where his law firm serves as plaintiff’s counsel. Transcript of Mot. Hearing, at 50-51, Wall of the Wild Movie, LLC. v. Smith, No. 10-cv-455 (Mar. 1, 2011) (“Every single subpoena we sent to an ISP has the [notice approved by Judge Collyer in Achte/Neunte Boll Kino Beteiligungs GMBH & Co, KG v. Does 1- 4,577 , No. 10-cv-00453 (D.D.C. July 22, 2010) (Minute Order approving Court-Directed Notice, ECF No. 36)] attached to it. And [ISP] Time Warner, I believe, reached an agreement on the form of that notice in Judge Collyer’s court, and every single subpoena we sent since that date in every new case has that notice.”).
[4] See Janyth D. Girard, ECF No. 11 (IP address listed: 71.32.60146); Louis R. Carpenter, ECF No. 18 (IP address listed: 97.127.24.109); JoNeane Key, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Sherry Porter, ECF No. 29 (No IP address listed); Michael B. Parker, ECF No. 31 (No IP address listed); James Kane, ECF No. 32 (No IP address listed); Jay R. Frydenlund, ECF No. 33 (IP address listed: 71.38.47.225); Debora L. Andrews, ECF No. 34 (IP address listed: 174.31.89.186); Jan H. Slater, ECF No. 35 (IP address listed: 71.212.5.157); Millwеe Holler-Kanaga, ECF No. 36
[6] See John Doe, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Nicole G. Lipson, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Kenneth G. Kupke, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Delmar R. Towler, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Richard L. Stellah, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Mary Jo Elgie, ECF No. 30 (IP address listed: 98.118.130.44); Aaron Tukey, ECF No. 136 (IP address listed: 68.116.170.119).
[7] See John Doe, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Nicole G. Lipson, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Kenneth G. Kupke, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Delmar R. Towler, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Richard L. Stellah, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Corbin Swan, ECF No. 43 (No IP address listed); Cheryl A. Lobo, ECF No. 56 (No IP address listed); Randall J. Azbill, Sr., ECF No. 57 (No IP address listed); John T. Krayer, ECF No. 58 (No IP address listed); Joseph M. Luria, ECF No. 59 (No IP address listed); Cameron J. Kennedy, ECF No. 60 (No IP address listed); David Allan Doll, ECF No. 62 (No IP address listed); Joseph M. Orovic, ECF No. 65 (No IP address listed); Rowena K. Cruz, ECF No. 66 (No IP address listed); Miriam Adelson, ECF No. 67 (No IP address listed); Antonio R. Hinton, ECF No. 68 (No IP address listed); Kenneth Kantorowicz, ECF No. 70 (IP address listed: 98.127.67.128); Jomy Joseph, ECF No. 74, (No IP address listed); Jonathan T. Payne, ECF No. 75 (No IP address listed); Carman I. Goodrich, ECF No. 76 (No IP address listed); John C. Jacobson, ECF No. 77 (No IP address listed); Ruth Shih, ECF No. 78 (No IP address listed); Sean E. Ringle, ECF No. 79 (No IP address listed); Simone J. Johnson, ECF No. 80 (No IP address listed); Jordan C. Neptune, ECF No. 81 (No IP address listed); Warren M. Gehl, ECF No. 82 (No IP address listed); Eric M. Miller, ECF No. 83 (No IP address listed); Richard T. Holbrook, II, ECF No. 84 (No IP address listed); Darren Choong Sik Hng, ECF No. 85 (No IP address listed); Todd D. Merrifield, ECF No. 86 (No IP address listed); Amelia Cardenas, ECF No. 95, (No IP address listed); Amanda J. Quast, ECF No. 96 (No IP address listed); Randy L. Morton, ECF No. 97 (No IP address listed); Samuel Neuenschwander, ECF No. 102 (IP address listed: 96.3.75.15); Jeff Scherer, ECF No. 111 (IP address listed: 184.96.91.86); Erik E. Johnston, ECF No. 121 (No IP address listed); Leigh Norris, ECF No. 126 (No IP address listed); Michael Scott Davis, ECF No. 127 (No IP address listed); Neel N. Patel, ECF No. 130 (No IP address listed); Matthew J. Selck, ECF No. 132 (No IP address listed); Aaron Tukey, ECF No. 136 (IP address listed: 68.116.170.119); J. McCarthy, ECF No. 148 (IP address listed: 72.73.239.68).
[8] See John Doe, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Nicole G. Lipson, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Kenneth G. Kupke, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Delmar R. Towler, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Richard L. Stellah, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Cheryl A. Lobo, ECF No. 56 (No IP address listed); Randall J. Azbill, Sr., ECF No. 57 (No IP address listed); John T. Krayer, ECF No. 58 (No IP address listed); Joseph M. Luria, ECF No. 59 (No IP address listed); Cameron J. Kennedy, ECF No. 60 (No IP address listed); David Allan Doll, ECF No. 62 (No IP address listed); Joseph M. Orovic, ECF No. 65 (No IP address listed); Miriam Adelson, ECF No. 67 (No IP address listed); Antonio R. Hinton, ECF No. 68 (No IP address listed); Jomy Joseph, ECF No. 74, (No IP аddress listed); Jonathan T. Payne, ECF No. 75 (No IP address listed); Carman I. Goodrich, ECF No. 76 (No IP address listed); John C. Jacobson, ECF No. 77 (No IP address listed); Ruth Shih, ECF No. 78 (No IP address listed); Sean E. Ringle, ECF No. 79 (No IP address listed); Simone J. Johnson, ECF No. 80 (No IP address listed); Jordan C. Neptune, ECF No. 81 (No IP address listed); Warren M. Gehl, ECF No. 82 (No IP address listed); Eric M. Miller, ECF No. 83 (No IP address listed); Richard T. Holbrook, II, ECF No. 84 (No IP address listed); Darren Choong Sik Hng, ECF No. 85 (No IP address listed); Todd D. Merrifield, ECF No. 86 (No IP address listed); Amelia Cardenas, ECF No. 95, (No IP address listed); Amanda J. Quast, ECF No. 96 (No IP address listed); Randy L. Morton, ECF No. 97 (No IP address listed); Erik E. Johnston, ECF No. 121 (No IP address listed); Kathleen Gonzales, ECF No. 129 (No IP address listed); Neel N. Patel, ECF No. 130 (No IP address listed); Matthew J. Selck, ECF No. 132 (No IP address listed); J. McCarthy, ECF No. 148 (IP address listed: 72.73.239.68).
[9] See Louis R. Carpenter, ECF No. 18 (IP address listed: 97.127.24.109); James Kane, ECF No. 32 (No IP address listed); Jan H. Slater, ECF No. 35 (IP address listed: 71.21.25.157); Sara Sherwood, ECF No. 37 (IP address listed:00:13:10:b9:71:a5); Sandra Dockery, ECF No. 39 (No IP address listed); Colin Quennell, ECF No. 40 (No IP address listed); Richard DeHart, ECF No. 47 (IP address listed: 70.59.194.89); Byron Lee, ECF No. 48 (IP address listed: 96.40.190.149.00); Adam Delgado, ECF No. 49 (No IP address listed); Karen Eiriz, ECF No. 50 (No IP address listed); Lucy A. Marsh, ECF No. 53 (No IP address listed); Jonathan D. Coleman, ECF No. 63 (No IP address listed); Aran Bedarian, ECF No. 71 (No IP address listed); Morris Carrejo, ECF No. 99 (No IP address listed); Charles Ellsworth, ECF No. 100 (No IP address listed); Anita M. Dorrance, ECF No. 104 (No IP address listed); Syed Mobeen, ECF No. 105 (No IP address listed); Chelsea Reitzner, ECF No. 106 (IP address listed: 24.183.109.103); Alan Stowers, ECF No. 107 (No IP address listed); Shani Myers, ECF No. 108 (No IP address listed); Darryl Godfrey, ECF No. 109 (No IP address listed); Justin Solem, ECF No. 112 (No IP address listed); Kathryn Lanier, ECF No. 119 (No IP address listed); Mary Woods, ECF No. 135 (IP address listed: 75.137.118.90); Guntars Rizijs, ECF No. 137 (No IP address listed); Chris Queen, ECF No. 138 (No IP address listed); Kaylin Werth, ECF No. 139 (IP address listed: 71.89.27.95); William White, ECF No. 141 (IP address listed: 66.190.77.95); Rita Shostak, ECF No. 149 (No IP address listed).
[10] A more expansive discussion of the putative defendants’ First Amendment rights in this case is contained in the
Court’s Memorandum Opinion filed March 22, 2011 in a similar case involving putative defendants accused of
using the BitTorrent file-sharing technology to download and distribute illegally copyright works.
See Call of the
Wild Movie, LLC v. Does 1-1,062
, No. 10-cv-455,
[11] Any reliance the putative defendants may have placed on Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 45(c)(3)(A)(ii) as an alternate basis for quashing the plaintiff’s subpoenas is therefore also misplaced. Rule 45(c)(3)(A)(ii) requires the Court to quash a subpoena when the subpoena “requires a person who is neither a party nor a party’s officer to travel more than 100 miles from where that person resides, is employed, or regularly transacts business in person . . . .” The putative defendants are not required to respond to the plaintiff’s subpoenas or otherwise travel away from their homes or places of employment.
[12] See John Doe, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Nicole G. Lipson, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Kenneth G. Kupke, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Delmar R. Towler, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Richard L. Stellah, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Cheryl A. Lobo, ECF No. 56 (No IP address listed); Randall J. Azbill, Sr., ECF No. 57 (No IP address listed); John T. Krayer, ECF No. 58 (No IP address listed); Joseph M. Luria, ECF No. 59 (No IP address listed); Cameron J. Kennedy, ECF No. 60 (No IP address listed); David Allan Doll, ECF No. 62 (No IP address listed); Joseph M. Orovic, ECF No. 65 (No IP address listed); Miriam Adelson, ECF No. 67 (No IP address listed); Antonio R. Hinton, ECF No. 68 (No IP address listed); Jomy Joseph, ECF No. 74, (No IP address listed); Jonathan T. Payne, ECF No. 75 (No IP address listed); Carman I. Goodrich, ECF No. 76 (No IP address listed); John C. Jacobson, ECF No. 77 (No IP address listed); Ruth Shih, ECF No. 78 (No IP address listed); Sean E. Ringle, ECF No. 79 (No IP address listed); Simone J. Johnson, ECF No. 80 (No IP addrеss listed); Jordan C. Neptune, ECF No. 81 (No IP address listed); Warren M. Gehl, ECF No. 82 (No IP address listed); Eric M. Miller, ECF No. 83 (No IP address listed); Richard T. Holbrook, II, ECF No. 84 (No IP address listed); Darren Choong Sik Hng, ECF No. 85 (No IP address listed); Todd D. Merrifield, ECF No. 86 (No IP address listed); Amelia Cardenas, ECF No. 95, (No IP address listed); Amanda J. Quast, ECF No. 96 (No IP address listed); Randy L. Morton, ECF No. 97 (No IP address listed); Erik E. Johnston, ECF No. 121 (No IP address listed); Kathleen Gonzales, ECF No. 129 (No IP address listed); Neel N. Patel, ECF No. 130 (No IP address listed); Matthew J. Selck, ECF No. 132 (No
[14] See John Doe, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Nicole G. Lipson, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Kenneth G. Kupke, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Delmar R. Towler, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Richard L. Stellah, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Mary Jo Elgie, ECF No. 30 (IP address listed: 98.118.130.44); Aaron Tukey, ECF No. 136 (IP address listed: 68.116.170.119).
[15] Rule 21 does not set forth what constitutes misjoinder, but “it is well-settled that parties are misjoined when the
preconditions of permissive joinder set forth in Rule 20(a) have not been satisfied.”
Disparte v. Corporate Exec. Bd.
,
[16] For a more expansive discussion regarding the propriety of joining the putative defendants in this case, see the
Court’s Memorandum Opinion filed March 22, 2011 in a similar case involving putative defendants accused of
using the BitTorrent file-sharing technology to download and distribute illegally copyright works.
Call of the Wild
Movie, LLC v. Does 1-1,062
, No. 10-cv-455,
[17] See John Doe, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Nicole G. Lipson, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Kenneth G. Kupke, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Delmar R. Towler, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Richard L. Stellah, ECF No. 18 (No IP address listed); Corbin Swan, ECF No. 43 (No IP address listed); Cheryl A. Lobo, ECF No. 56 (No IP address listed); Randall J. Azbill, Sr., ECF No. 57 (No IP address listed); John T. Krayer, ECF No. 58 (No IP address listed); Joseph M. Luria, ECF No. 59 (No IP address listed); Cameron J. Kennedy, ECF No. 60 (No IP address listed); David Allan Doll, ECF No. 62 (No IP address listed); Joseph M. Oroviс, ECF No. 65 (No IP address listed); Rowena K. Cruz, ECF No. 66 (No IP address listed); Miriam Adelson, ECF No. 67 (No IP address listed); Antonio R. Hinton, ECF No. 68 (No IP address listed); Kenneth Kantorowicz, ECF No. 70 (IP address listed: 98.127.67.128); Jomy Joseph, ECF No. 74, (No IP address listed); Jonathan T. Payne, ECF No. 75 (No IP address listed); Carman I. Goodrich, ECF No. 76 (No IP address listed); John C. Jacobson, ECF No. 77 (No IP address listed); Ruth Shih, ECF No. 78 (No IP address listed); Sean E. Ringle, ECF No. 79 (No IP address listed); Simone J. Johnson, ECF No. 80 (No IP address listed); Jordan C. Neptune, ECF No. 81 (No IP address listed); Warren M. Gehl, ECF No. 82 (No IP address listed); Eric M. Miller, ECF No. 83 (No IP address listed); Richard T. Holbrook, II, ECF No. 84 (No IP address listed); Darren Choong Sik Hng, ECF No. 85 (No IP address listed); Todd D. Merrifield, ECF No. 86 (No IP address listed); Amelia Cardenas, ECF No. 95, (No IP address listed); Amanda J. Quast, ECF No. 96 (No IP address listed); Randy L. Morton, ECF No. 97 (No IP address listed); Samuel Neuenschwander, ECF No. 102 (IP address listed: 96.3.75.15); Jeff Scherer, ECF No. 111 (IP address listed: 184.96.91.86); Erik E. Johnston, ECF No. 121 (No IP address listed); Leigh Norris, ECF No. 126 (No IP address listed); Michael Scott Davis, ECF No. 127 (No IP address listed); Neel N. Patel, ECF No. 130 (No IP address
[18] The putative defendants argue that the plaintiff should have used freely available tools that extract the geolocation information embedded in each IP addrеss in order to verify the putative defendants’ location prior to filing claims in the District of Columbia. While it may behoove the plaintiff to utilize tools to ascertain the general location of the putative defendants prior to filing its case, these lookup tools are not completely accurate and it does not resolve for the Court the question of whether personal jurisdiction would be proper. Ultimately, the Court would still be unable to evaluate properly jurisdictional arguments until the putative defendants are identified and named. See Sony, 326 F. Supp. 2d. at 567-68 (“Assuming personal jurisdiction were proper to consider at this juncture, the [publicly available IP lookup] techniques suggested by amici, at best, suggest the mere ‘likelihood’ that a number of defendants are located [outside this jurisdiction]. This, however, does not resolve whether personal jurisdiction would be proper.”).
[19] A more expansive discussion regarding the personal jurisdiction issues involved in this case is contained in the
Court’s Memorandum Opinion filed March 22, 2011 in a similar case involving putative defendants accused of
using the BitTorrent file-sharing technology to download and distribute illegally copyright works.
See Call of the
Wild Movie, LLC v. Does 1-1,062
, No. 10-cv-455,
