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Thomas C. Rushing III,
Brian C. Rue, & William Lance Partridge Distributed $2.5M in
Pirated Software
August 25, 2008
Three
defendants pleaded guilty to selling counterfeit computer software on
the Internet in violation of criminal copyright infringement laws.
Thomas C. Rushing III, 24, of Wichita Falls, Texas, and Brian C. Rue,
29, of Denton, Texas, pleaded guilty to one count each of criminal
copyright infringement before U.S. District Court Judge Sam Sparks in
Austin, Texas. William Lance Partridge, 24, of Royse City, Texas,
pleaded guilty to one count of criminal copyright infringement before
U.S. Magistrate Judge Andrew W. Austin, in Austin. Rushing, Rue and
Partridge each face a maximum penalty of five years in prison, a fine of
$250,000 and three years of supervised release. Sentencing for all three
defendants is scheduled for Dec. 19, 2008.
Documents filed with the court indicate that between early 2006 and
September 2007, Rushing, Rue and Partridge operated several Web sites
that sold a large volume of counterfeit software. The software sold by
the defendants had a combined retail value of $2,500,000. The defendants
admitted using Web sites identified as valuesoftwaresales.com,
allsoftwaredownload.com, esoftwarevalue.com and priceslashsoftware.com
to sell downloadable counterfeit software without authorization from the
copyright owners. The defendants also admitted promoting their scheme by
purchasing advertising for their Web sites from major Internet search
engines.
This
case is part of the Department of Justice’s ongoing initiative to combat
the sale of pirated software and counterfeit goods via commercial Web
sites and online auction sites such as eBay. Including the three pleas
secured today, this initiative has obtained 32 felony convictions. The
Department’s initiative to combat commercial online piracy is just one
of several steps being undertaken to address the losses caused by
intellectual property theft and hold responsible those engaged in
criminal copyright infringement.
The Rushing, Rue and Partridge cases are being prosecuted by Trial
Attorney Marc Miller of the Criminal Division’s Computer Crime and
Intellectual Property Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney for the
Western District of Texas Matthew B. Devlin. The cases were investigated
by the ICE Cyber Crimes Center, the Office of the Special
Agent-in-Charge in San Antonio and the Office of the Resident
Agent-in-Charge in Austin. |