UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
	DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

____________________________
                            )
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA    )
                            )
        v.                  )	  Cr. No. 94-10092-RGS
                            )
DAVID M. LaMACCHIA          )
____________________________)

	MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF DEFENDANT'S
	MOTION TO DISMISS THE INDICTMENT FOR FAILURE
	TO STATE AN OFFENSE AND ON CONSTITUTIONAL GROUNDS

	Introduction

	The government has charged a 21 year old Massachusetts 

Institute of Technology ("MIT") student, David LaMacchia, 

with conspiracy to commit wire fraud, in violation of 18 

U.S.C. § 371.  The indictment alleges that, as the systems 

operator ("SYSOP") of an electronic bulletin board system 

("BBS") on MIT's computer network, LaMacchia conspired with 

unknown persons to engage in a "scheme or artifice to 

defraud" to 
	
	permit and facilitate, on an international scale, the 

	illegal copying and distribution of copyrighted 

	software, without payment of software licensing fees or 

	the software purchase price to the manufacturers and 

	vendors of the copyrighted software.

Indictment  5.	

	LaMacchia contends that the indictment invents a 
	
criminal charge, primarily by distorting the wire fraud 

statute, in order to circumvent Congress's decision not to 

apply a criminal sanction to LaMacchia's alleged conduct.
 
The indictment's fatal defect can best be seen by noting the 

words that the indictment avoids using, and the crimes it 

does not charge.  

	Although the indictment charges that the goal of the 
	
charged conspiracy was the "illegal copying and distribution 

of copyrighted software" which caused financial injuries to 

copyright holders, the indictment avoids using Congress's 

term of art for such a wrongful appropriation of the 

copyright holders' rights -- infringement.  17 U.S.C. § 

501(a).  Instead, the indictment contrives to misbrand 

alleged copyright infringement by renaming it as a "scheme or 

artifice to defraud" executed by "illegal copying and 

distribution of copyrighted software" in a vain effort to 

bring LaMacchia's alleged conduct within hailing distance of 

activity prohibited by the wire fraud statute, 18 U.S.C. § 

1343.  

	But the indictment's legal legerdemain does not end 
	
there.  Even though the "scheme to defraud" prohibited by the 

wire fraud statute is itself an inchoate offense, the 

indictment does not charge that LaMacchia committed, or even 

aided or abetted the commission of, wire fraud.  Indeed, the 

indictment does not allege that LaMacchia personally copied 

or distributed any copyrighted software or that he was 

actually aware of the extent of such activity by others.
   
Rather, the government attempts to stretch the already thin 

reed even further by charging LaMacchia with conspiracy to 

commit wire fraud, attempting thereby to make him criminally 

liable for conduct committed by unnamed persons, including 

conduct he was not actually aware of.

	Most significantly, though the true legal name for the 
	
goal of the alleged conspiracy is copyright infringement, the 

indictment does not charge that either LaMacchia or his 

unnamed co-conspirators committed, or even conspired to 

commit, criminal copyright infringement in violation of the 

Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C. § 506.  That provision requires 

proof that the infringement was done "willfully and for 

purposes of commercial advantage or private financial gain." 

Effectively conceding that the conduct alleged in the 

indictment was not done for profit and therefore does not 

constitute criminal infringement or conspiracy to commit 

criminal infringement, the government has nevertheless 

decided to bring this prosecution because it believes that
 
LaMacchia's conduct should be a crime even if it is not.    

	The prosecution's attempt at lawmaking is prohibited, 

however, by the Supreme Court's decision in Dowling v. United 

States, 473 U.S. 207 (1985), which held that criminal 

prosecutions for alleged copyright infringement must be 

brought, if at all, under the Copyright Act, and cannot be 

brought under statutes enacted by Congress to prohibit 

interstate theft and fraud pursuant to its interstate 

commerce power.

	In Dowling, the Supreme Court reversed the defendant's 
	
conviction for violation of the National Stolen Property Act,
 
18 U.S.C. § 2314, in connection with his interstate 

distribution of infringing Elvis Presley recordings.  In 

doing so, the Court specifically rejected the government's 

argument that the infringing recordings were "taken by fraud" 

so as to be covered by that statute.  The Court held that 

Congress has regulated the copyright area directly, and in 

great detail, in the Copyright Act pursuant to the special 

grant of congressional authority contained in Article I, § 8, 

cl. 8 of the Constitution.  It ruled that the specific and 

exclusive term Congress used for the wrongful appropriation 

of copyright holders' rights is infringement, and that the 

word "fraud" was "ill-fitting" when applied to copyright 

infringement.  

	The Court emphasized that the purpose underlying the 
	
interstate fraud and theft statutes enacted pursuant to 

Congress's power to regulate interstate commerce -- the need 

to fill gaps in state-by-state law enforcement -- does not 

apply to the copyright area, where Congress has authority to 

penalize the distribution of infringing goods directly, 

whether or not those goods affect interstate commerce. 473 

U.S. at 219-220.  In light of the special care Congress has 

shown in crafting the civil and criminal provisions of the 

Copyright Act, the Court found it "implausible to suppose 

that Congress intended to combat the problem of copyright 

infringement by the circuitous route hypothesized by the 

Government", 472 U.S. at 222, and refused to presume 

"congressional adoption of an indirect but blunderbuss 

solution to a problem treated with precision when considered 

directly" in the Copyright Act.  473 U.S. at 227.  

	The Court acknowledged the temptation to utilize a fraud 
	
and theft statute enacted pursuant to the commerce power as 

an "existing and readily available tool to combat the 

increasingly serious problem of ... copyright infringement," 

but concluded that such use was prohibited by the notice and 

separation of powers concerns underlying the rule that 

criminal statutes must be narrowly construed.  473 U.S. at 

228-229.

	The Dowling decision establishes that Congress has 

	finely calibrated the reach of criminal liability 

	[in the Copyright Act], and therefore absent clear 

	indication of Congressional intent, the criminal 

	laws of the United States do not reach copyright-

	related conduct.  Thus copyright prosecutions 
	
	should be limited to Section 506 of the Act, and 

	other incidental statutes that explicitly refer to 

	copyright and copyrighted works.

Nimmer on Copyright, Vol. 3 §15.05, at p. 15-20 (1993); 

Goldstein, Copyright, Vol. II, §11.4.2, at 304 n.67 (1989) 

("although the Court did not directly rule on whether the 

mail fraud statute encompassed the infringing conduct, its 

reasoning with respect to the Stolen Property Act, 18 U.S.C. 

§ 2314, suggests that it would have treated the mail fraud 

statute similarly").  See United States v. Gallant, 570 F. 

Supp. 303 (S.D.N.Y. 1983) (distribution and sale of 

infringing records is not a "scheme to defraud" within the 

meaning of the federal wire fraud statute).	The Dowling 

holding has been directly applied to schemes involving 

computer software.  United States v. Brown, 925 F.2d 1301 

(10th Cir. 1991) (illegal copying and distribution of 

computer software does not violate § 2314).

	The case at bar, involving an allegedly fraudulent 
	
scheme to copy and distribute copyrighted material, is four-

square with the Dowling case except that the "circuitous" and 

"blunderbuss" route proposed by the government here is an 

indictment alleging conspiracy to commit interstate wire 

fraud, rather than interstate transportation of property 

"taken by fraud".  This distinction is irrelevant, however, 

because the primary holding of Dowling -- that conduct 

interfering with copyright rights is punishable, if at all, 

under the Copyright Act -- applies equally to the wire fraud 

statute which, like the National Stolen Property Act, makes 

no reference to copyrighted materials and was enacted by 

Congress pursuant to its interstate commerce power to fill 

gaps in state law enforcement.

	Moreover, this case is even stronger than Dowling in one
 
important respect:  Unlike the defendant in Dowling, who was 

found guilty of criminal copyright violations, 473 U.S. at 

212, LaMacchia is not even charged with any violation of the 

Copyright Act.  To permit the prosecution to use an 

indictment charging conspiracy to commit wire fraud so as to 

circumvent Congress's specific decision not to criminalize 

the conduct in question via the Copyright Act, would give 

rise to Due Process/notice and separation of powers concerns 

even more serious than those expressed by the Dowling Court.

	The indictment charges LaMacchia with conspiring to 
	
commit wire fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1343.  Since, under Dowling, 

the conduct alleged to have been the objective of the 

conspiracy does not constitute wire fraud, the indictment 

fails to allege the essential element of agreement to engage 

in conduct which constitutes a federal crime.  United States 

v. Laub, 385 U.S. 475 (1967); O'Malley v. United States, 227 

F.2d 332, 335 (1st Cir. 1955), cert. denied, 350 U.S. 966 

(1956).

	Accordingly, the indictment fails to state an offense 
	
and must be dismissed under F.R.Crim.P. 12(b).

			Argument
			
I.	CONGRESS DID NOT INTEND THE WIRE FRAUD
	STATUTE TO APPLY TO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT.
	
	At the core of the Dowling opinion is the Court's 
	
recognition that federal crimes are defined by statute, not 

by prosecutorial nor judicial interpretation.  Quoting former 

Chief Justice Marshall, the Court reiterated that

	The rule that penal laws are to be construed 

	strictly, is perhaps not much less old than 

	construction itself.  It is founded on the 

	tenderness of the law for the rights of 

	individuals; and on the plain principle that the 

	power of punishment is vested in the legislative, 

	not in the judicial department.  It is the 

	legislature, not the Court which is to define a 

	crime and ordain its punishment.

473 U.S. at 213-214 (quoting United States v. Wiltberger, 5 

Wheat. 76, 95 (1820)).  Thus, the Court emphasized that 

"[d]ue respect for the prerogatives of Congress in defining 

federal crimes prompts restraint in [the criminal] area, 

where we typically find a `narrow interpretation.' 

appropriate."  473 U.S. at 213 (quoting Williams v. United 

States, 458 U.S. 279, 290 (1982)).

	The Court has repeatedly applied this constitutionally 
	
required principle of statutory construction by affording 

deference to the specialized and detailed provisions of the 

Copyright Act.  See, e.g., Dowling, 473 U.S. at 220; Sony 

Corp. v. Universal City Studios, 464 U.S. 417, 429 (1984).  

In reversing the conviction under § 2314 in the Dowling case, 

the Court observed that

	the deliberation with which Congress over the last 
	
	decade has addressed the problem of copyright 
	
	infringement for profit, as well as the precision 
	
	with which it has chosen to apply criminal 
	
	penalties in this area, demonstrates anew the 
	
	wisdom of leaving it to the legislature to define 
	
	crime and prescribe penalties.

473 U.S. at 228.  See also Sony, 464 U.S. at 429 ("As the 

text of the Constitution makes plain, it is Congress that has 

been assigned the task of defining the scope of the limited 

monopoly that should be granted to authors or to inventors in 

order to give the public appropriate access to their work 

product.")  Here, as in Dowling, Congress has not given any 

indication that it intended a criminal fraud statute enacted 

pursuant to its commerce power to be used to protect rights 

which it created, and designed specific protections for, in 

the Copyright Act.  To the contrary, a comparison of the 

language, history, and purpose of the wire fraud statute and 

the Copyright Act evidence Congress's intent that 

prosecutions for copyright infringement be brought only under 

the criminal infringement provision of the Copyright Act.

	A.	Comparison of the Text of the Copyright Act With 
		the Wire Fraud Statute's Prohibition of a "Scheme 
		or Artifice to Defraud" Shows That the Wire Fraud 
		Statute Does not Encompass Copyright Infringement.

	The wire fraud statute requires proof of a scheme or 
	
artifice to defraud a victim out of his interest in money or 

property, Carpenter v. United States, 484 U.S. 19 (1987), 

however, nothing in Carpenter indicates that wrongful 

appropriation of the bundle of rights created by the 

Copyright Act is covered by the wire fraud statute's 

prohibition of schemes to defraud.   To the contrary, in 

Dowling, the Supreme Court held that the wrongful 

appropriation of the federally created rights conferred by 

the Copyright Act was not intended by Congress to be reached 

by its use in § 2314 of the phrase, "taken by fraud".  In 

language which controls here, the Court stated 

	It follows that interference with copyright does 
	not easily equate with theft, conversion or fraud. 
	The Copyright Act even employs a separate term of 
	art to define one who misappropriates a copyright: 
	"'Anyone who violates any of the exclusive rights 
	of the copyright owner, anyone who trespasses into 
	his exclusive domain by using or authorizing the 
	use of the copyrighted work in one of the five ways 
	set forth in the statute is an infringer of the 
	copyright.' 17 U.S.C. § 501(a)."

Dowling, 473 U.S. at 217, quoting Sony Corp., supra, 464 U.S. 
at 433 (emphasis supplied).

  	The Court's refusal to equate wrongful misappropriation 

of copyright holder's profits with fraud, and its insistence 

that Congress intended such conduct to be proscribed 

exclusively by its specialized term of art -- infringement -- 

was based on far more than the lexical differences between 

different words used by Congress in the Copyright Act and in 

an interstate fraud statute.  The Court explained that 

Congress's highly specialized and precise definitions of the 

circumstances in which the protection of the copyright 

holders' property interests would be redressed by a civil 

remedy or punished by a criminal sanction were just as 

carefully and purposefully phrased as the words Congress used 

to delineate and create the rights of the copyright holder in 

a protected work.  The definitional boundaries of the 

copyright holder's property interest and the civil and 

remedies for its protection work together "correspondingly" 

and harmoniously:

	A copyright, like other intellectual property, 
	comprises a series of carefully defined and 
	carefully delimited interests to which the law
	affords correspondingly exact protections.

Dowling, supra, 473 U.S. at 216 (emphasis supplied).

	This indictment attempts to evade these "correspondingly 

exact protections" embodied in Congress's design of the 

criminal infringement statute, 17 U.S.C. § 506(a).  As part 

of its carefully balanced statutory scheme, Congress 

purposefully limited the reach of the criminal sanction to 

those wrongful appropriators of copyrighted works or the 

profits derived therefrom who, unlike LaMacchia, act 

"wilfully and for purposes of commercial advantage or private 

gain".  Congress deliberately chose not to impose a criminal 

sanction, more broadly, upon anyone who executes a scheme to 

deprive, or actually succeeds in depriving, a copyright 

holder of his money or property through illegal copying or 

distribution of his copyrighted work.  The indictment seeks 

to have this court interpret the wire fraud statute, a non-

copyright law, so as to reverse this legislative judgment, 

simply because the Department of Justice believes that 

Congress's definition of criminal copyright infringement is 

under-inclusive or inadequate to address rapidly changing 

technological conditions.  

	This court should insist, as the Dowling Court 
	
instructs, that it will not legislate in this manner.  By 

comparing the texts of the Copyright Act and the interstate 

fraud statute at issue in that case, the Dowling Court 

recognized that Congress's exercise of its exclusive 

copyright power involves sensitive weighing of vitally 

important economic and non-economic interests.  

	The Constitution authorizes Congress to confer certain 
	
rights upon copyright holders "[t]o promote the Progress of 

Science and useful Arts."  U.S. Const., art. I, § 8, cl. 8.
  
Unlike property rights created by state statutory or common 

law, the privileges conferred upon copyright holders "are not 

based upon any natural right that the author has in his 

writings", and "are neither unlimited nor primarily designed 

to provide a special benefit."  Sony, 464 U.S. at 429 & n. 10 

(quoting House Judiciary Report accompanying 1909 revision of 

Copyright Act, H.R. Rep. No. 2222, 60th Cong., 2d Sess., 7 

(1909)).  "The primary objective of copyright is not to 

reward the labor of authors, but '[t]o promote the Progress 

of Science and useful Arts.' Art. I, § 8, cl. 8."   Feist 

Publications, Inc. v. Rural Telephone Service Co., ___ U.S. 

___, 111 S.Ct. 1282, 1290 (1991).  "The sole interest of the 

United States and the primary object in conferring the 

monopoly lie in the general benefits derived by the public 

from the labors of authors."  464 U.S. at 429 (quoting United 

States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc., 334 U.S. 131, 158 

(1948)).  Copyright law makes profits to the copyright holder 

"a secondary consideration."  Id.

	Correspondingly, Congress has not criminalized all 
	
wrongful misappropriations of copyright holders' profits, nor 

all misappropriations of such profits accomplished by fraud 

or intended to be accomplished by a scheme or artifice to 

defraud.  Congress has determined that wrongful conduct which 

seeks to inflict or actually inflicts a loss of such profits 

upon the copyright holder -- but which was not engaged in 

"for commercial advantage or private financial gain" -- not 

be addressed through a criminal sanction.

	The limited scope of the criminal sanction which 
	
Congress has designed for only a limited subset of wrongful 

misappropriations of copyright holders' rights is designed to 

be consonant with the scope of the limited monopoly which 

Congress granted to copyright holders, and its secondary 

ranking of the protection of copyright holders' profits as an 

objective of copyright law.  The boundaries of the criminal 

copyright sanction are part of a comprehensive and exclusive 

legislative scheme which reflects a careful balance between 

encouraging both the production and dissemination of new 

works and widespread access to and use of these works.  See 

Sony, 464 U.S. at 429.  The First Amendment value of free 

dissemination of ideas is part of this balance and is 

embodied in the Copyright Act.  Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, 

Inc., 114 S. Ct. 1165, 1171 (1994) (recognizing the 

"guarantee of breathing space within the confines of 

copyright"); Harper & Row Publishers v. Nation Enterprises, 

471 U.S. 539, 558-560 (1985) (recognizing that "the Framers 

intended copyright itself to be the engine of free 

expression" and that there are "First Amendment protections 

already embodied in the Copyright Act").  See Goldstein, 

supra at  10.3 at 242 (describing consonance between 

copyright and First Amendment).      

	Thus, unlike the state law property rights protected by 

the wire fraud and similar interstate fraud statutes, "the 

copyright holder's dominion is subjected to precisely defined 

limits."  Dowling, 473 U.S. at 217.  For example, a copyright 

protects only the particular expression of facts or ideas, 

not the facts or ideas themselves.  Campbell, 114 S. Ct. at 

1169 & n.5; Harper & Row Publishers, 471 U.S. at 560 

(recognizing the First Amendment protection embodied in the 

distinction between copyrightable expression and 

uncopyrightable facts and ideas).  Similarly, the Copyright 

Act "has never accorded the copyright owner complete control 

over all possible uses of his work."  Dowling, 473 U.S. at 

216.  Rather, the Act codifies the traditional privilege of 

others to make "fair use" of the copyrighted work.  17 U.S.C. 

§ 107; Campbell, 114 S. Ct. at 1170 (observing that the fair 

use doctrine guarantees "breathing space").   

	Recognition that a copyright "comprises a series of 

carefully defined and carefully delimited interests to which 

the law affords correspondingly exact protections,"  473 U.S. 

at 216, led the Court in Dowling to conclude that "[w]hile 

one may colloquially like[n] infringement with some general 

notion of wrongful appropriation, infringement plainly 

implicates a more complex set of property interests than does 

run-of-the-mill theft, conversion, or fraud."  473 U.S. at 

217-218 (emphasis supplied).  See Sony, 464 U.S. at 451 n. 33 

(holding that the copying of copyrighted material "does not 

even remotely entail comparable consequences to the copyright 

owner" as "theft of a particular item of personal property.")

	The government would have this court interpret non-

copyright statutes in a manner which plainly interferes with 

Congress's carefully constructed statutory scheme, even 

though the Supreme Court assiduously protected the copyright 

laws from a similar Justice Department assault in Dowling.   

  	Here, as in Dowling, the alleged scheme to copy and 

distribute copyrighted materials does not constitute a 

"scheme to defraud" a victim out of money or property 

protected by the wire fraud and similar commerce power 

statutes.  The highly specialized wording, nuanced balancing 

of interests and exclusively federal nature of Congress's 

system of protections from and remedies for copyright 

infringement indicates that Congress did not intend the 


wrongful misappropriation of copyright holders' profits or 

works to be punishable as an interstate "scheme to defraud" 

intended to deprive a person of money or property protected 

by state law.  	

	As the Court cautioned in Dowling, "when interpreting a 

criminal statute that does not explicitly reach the conduct 

in question,...[courts should be] reluctant to base an 

expansive reading on inferences drawn from subjective and 

variable `understandings.'"  473 U.S. at 218.  Here, as in 

Dowling, this Court must conclude that Congress did not 

intend the wire fraud statute to reach the interference with 

copyright alleged in the indictment. 

	B.	The Legislative History of the Wire Fraud
		Statute Does not Demonstrate Congressional
		Intent to Reach Copyright Infringement Schemes.

	In Dowling the Court reasoned that the premise of 
	
section 2314 -- "the need to fill with federal action an 

enforcement chasm created by limited state jurisdiction" -- 

simply does not apply to the copyright area, where no such 

need exists due to Congress's constitutional authority to 

penalize copyright infringement directly, whether or not the 

infringement affects interstate commerce.  473 U.S. at 218-

221.  The Court pointed out that, in dealing with infringing 

goods, "Congress has never thought it necessary to 

distinguish between intrastate and interstate activity.  Nor 

does any good reason to do so occur to us."  473 U.S. at 221.

	Similarly, the legislative history of the wire fraud 

statute reveals that it, like section 2314, represents a 

congressional exercise of the commerce power to fill state 

law enforcement gaps.  The wire fraud statute was aimed 

primarily at preventing "frauds against the public."  House 

Report No. 388, 82nd Congress, 1st Sess. at 1 (1951).  

Recognizing that fraud is inherently a matter of state rather 

than federal concern, Congress limited the wire fraud 

statute, as it had to for jurisdictional purposes, to 

situations involving interstate wire or radio transmissions. 

 Id., at 3.  The wire fraud statute, like the statute at 

issue in the Dowling case, was Congress's response to "the 

need for federal action in an area that normally would have 

been left to state law."  473 U.S. at 220.

	As the Court emphasized in Dowling, however, copyright 
	
is an area of federal rather than state concern.  Congress 

has regulated this area directly in the Copyright Act and has 

chosen not to distinguish between intrastate and interstate 

infringements.  473 U.S. at 221.  In contrast to the wide 

variety of fraud schemes covered by the wire fraud statute, 

the states have no interest in nor authority over schemes to 

infringe federal copyright rights, since Congress has 

expressly preempted the copyright area from state regulation 

and control.  17 U.S.C. § 301.  In short, since Congress has 

regulated the copyright area directly in the Copyright Act, 

there is no need for supplemental federal action under 

statutes enacted pursuant to Congress's interstate commerce 

power.  

	Here, as in Dowling, the premise of the criminal statute 

which the defendant is charged with violating -- "the need to 

fill with federal action an enforcement chasm created by 

limited state jurisdiction -- simply does not apply to the 

conduct the Government seeks to reach here."  473 U.S. at 

221.  Thus, in this case, as in Dowling, "it is implausible 

to suppose that Congress intended to combat the problem of 

copyright infringement by the circuitous route hypothesized 

by the Government."  Id.   

	C.	The History of the Copyright Act Indicates
		That Congress did not Believe the Wire
		Fraud Statute Applied to Copyright Violations.

	In Dowling, the Court reviewed the legislative history 

of the Copyright Act through 1985 and found that it supplied 

additional reason not to presume "congressional adoption of 

an indirect but blunderbuss solution to a problem treated 

with precision when considered directly."  473 U.S. at 221-

226.  The Court observed that  

	[n]ot only has Congress chiefly relied on an array 

	of civil remedies to provide copyright holders 

	protection against infringement, see 18 U.S.C. §§ 

	502-505, but in exercising its power to render 

	criminal certain forms of copyright infringement, 

	it has acted with exceeding caution.

473 U.S. at 221.  The Court noted that Congress "hesitated 

long before imposing felony sanctions on copyright 

infringers," then "carefully chose those areas of 

infringement that required severe response," and "studiously 

graded penalties even in those areas of heightened concern." 

 473 U.S. at 225.  The Court found that this "step-by-step, 

carefully considered approach is consistent with Congress' 

traditional sensitivity to the special concerns implicated by 

the copyright laws," and utterly inconsistent with the 

"blunderbuss" idea of prosecuting copyright infringement 

indirectly through a fraud provision that was neither 

designed or tailored to apply to the specialized concerns 

involved in fixing criminal sanctions to protect the 

interests of copyright holders.  473 U.S. at 225-226.  The 

Court observed that "neither the text nor the legislative 

history" of the Copyright Act "evidences any congressional 

awareness, let alone approval, of the use of" section 2314 

"in prosecutions for interference with copyright."  473 U.S. 

at 225 n.18.  The discrepancy between Congress's careful 

balancing of interests in the Copyright Act and the 

government's "blunderbuss" attempt to prosecute copyright 

infringement using an interstate fraud statute enacted 

pursuant to the interstate commerce power, convinced the 

Court "that Congress had no intention to reach copyright 

infringement when it enacted" the non-copyright criminal 

provision.  473 U.S. at 226. 

	Similarly, the discrepancy between the Congress's 
	
approach in the Copyright Act to criminalization of copyright 

infringement, particularly to criminal infringement of 

computer software copyrights, and the government's 

"blunderbuss" attempt to apply the wire fraud statute to this 

case leads to the conclusion that Congress did not intend for 

the wire fraud statute to reach copyright infringement.
 
	Unlike the wire fraud statute, which Congress has 

amended only three times in 42 years, Congress has frequently 

amended the Copyright Act in response to changes in 

technology.  Sony, 464 U.S. at 430 & n.11 ("From its 

beginning, the law of copyright has developed in response to 

significant changes in technology.").  Congress has shown 

particular care and precision in designing the copyright 

protection for computer software.

	In 1974 Congress created the National Commission on New 

Technological Uses of Copyrighted Works (CONTU) to evaluate 

the need for legislation protecting computer software and to 

make specific recommendations for such legislation.  See 120 

Cong. Rec. 41415 (1974) (the evaluation by CONTU "is 

inherently valuable in our forthcoming review of the 

copyright laws.") (statement by Rep. Danielson).  The 

Commission spent three years collecting data, holding 

hearings, and deliberating before recommending that the 

Copyright Act be amended to protect computer software.  

National Commission on New Technological Users of Copyrighted 

Works, Final Report 2 (1978).  Based on CONTU's 

recommendations, Congress enacted the Computer Software 

Copyright Act of 1980, which added to the Copyright Act 

provisions explicitly defining computer programs, 17 U.S.C. § 

101, and authorizing owners of computer programs to copy them 

for certain purposes.  17 U.S.C. § 117.  Congress initially 

provided only a misdemeanor penalty for criminal infringement 

of computer software copyrights, and proceeded with caution 

before imposing felony penalties for such conduct.  In 

enacting the Piracy and Counterfeiting Amendments of 1982, 

which created a felony penalty for certain types of copyright 

infringement, Congress specifically excluded infringements of 

computer software.  Pub.L. 97-180, 96 Stat. 91 (amending 17 

U.S.C. §506(a) and enacting 18 U.S.C. § 2319).  Congress 

increased the copyright protection afforded computer software 

in the Computer Software Rental Amendments of 1990, but did 

not increase the criminal penalties for software infringement 

at that time.  Pub.L. 101-650 (amending 17 U.S.C. § 109).  

Congress waited until 1992 before enacting a felony penalty 

for software copyright infringement.  Pub.L. 102-561 

(amending 18 U.S.C. §2319 to include computer software).

	Far from evidencing any congressional awareness or 

approval of wire fraud prosecutions in this area, the 

legislative history of the 1992 amendment to the Copyright 

Act makes clear that Congress believed that infringement of 

computer software copyrights was not covered by any then-

existing criminal felony provision.  The Senate Report 

accompanying the 1992 amendment states that "[t]he only 

defense against piracy is the copyright law" and that the 

amendment creating a felony penalty for copyright 

infringement was necessary "[b]ecause acts of software piracy 

are only misdemeanors [and] prosecutors are disinclined to 

prosecute these criminal acts."  Senate Report No. 102-997 

192nd Cong., 2nd Sess, at 3 (1992).  See Hearings on S. 893 

before Subcommittee on Intellectual Property and Judicial 

Administration of House Judiciary Committee (August 12, 1992) 

(comment of Rep. James) ("all copyright infringements as they 

relate to computer programming are as a matter of law nothing 

more than a misdemeanor at this time.  There is no felony 

involved.")  Thus, in amending the Copyright Act in 1992, 

Congress believed it was creating the exclusive felony 

criminal provision applicable to copyright infringement.

	The legislative history of the 1992 amendment creating 

the felony penalty for software copyright infringement makes 

it especially clear that Congress intended criminal penalties 

to be imposed only upon "commercial pirates" and not 

individuals who, without profit motive, make or distribute 

infringing software for personal use or for friends.  Senate 

Report 102-268 at 2 (provision is aimed at "thieves who 

desire to duplicate and sell unauthorized copies"); Id. at 3 

(the mens rea "limitation restricts prosecutions to 

commercial pirates); House Report 102-997 at 5-6 ("Even if 

civil liability has been established, without the requisite 

mens rea it does not matter how many unauthorized 

copies...have been made or distributed:  No criminal 

violation has occurred."); 138 Cong. Rec. S. 17958-59 

(October 8, 1992) ("the copying must be undertaken to make 

money, and even incidental financial benefits that might 

accrue as a result of the copying should not contravene the 

law where the achievement of those benefits were not the 

motivation behind the copying.") (comments of sponsor Sen. 

Hatch); 138 Cong. Rec. S. 7580 (June 4, 1992) ("the large-

scale, commercially oriented copying of computer programs 

should be treated as a criminal offense") (comments of Sen. 

Hatch).  The government's attempt to circumvent this mens rea 

requirement by prosecuting LaMacchia for conspiracy to commit 

wire fraud threatens to undermine the clear and manifest 

intent of Congress.

	Similarly, Congress studiously graduated penalties and 

remedies under the Copyright Act, differentiating between 

civil and criminal penalties, and within the later category 

between misdemeanor (up to one year) and felony punishment 

(up to 10 years) based upon the extent of infringement 

involved, and between first-time (up to five years) and 

repeat (up to ten years) offenders.  18 U.S.C. § 2319 (b).  

Application of the wire fraud statute in this area would 

override those graduations, imposing felony punishment 

regardless of the type or amount of the infringement. 18 

U.S.C. § 1343.  See Dowling, 473 U.S. at 225-226.  Use of the 

wire fraud statute to prosecute copyright infringement would 

also override Congress's enactment of a shorter statute of 

limitations for criminal copyright infringement prosecutions. 

 Compare 17 U.S.C. § 507(a) (three year statute of 

limitations for criminal copyright prosecutions), with 18 

U.S.C. § 3282 (general five-year statute of limitations 

applicable to prosecutions of noncapital offenses, including 

wire fraud).

	The Supreme Court has warned that courts should not 

expand upon the protections afforded by the Copyright Act 

without "explicit legislative guidance."  Sony, 464 U.S. at 

431; Dowling, 473 U.S. at 228-229.  The government's belief 

that "[i]n this new electronic environment it has become 

increasingly difficult to protect intellectual property 

rights," provides no exception to this rule, for as the Court 

has stated

	[s]ound policy, as well as history, supports our 

	consistent deference to Congress when major 

	technological innovations alter the market for 

	copyrighted materials.  Congress has the 

	constitutional authority and the institutional 

	ability to accommodate fully the varied 

	permutations of competing interests that are 

	inevitably implicated by such new technology.

Sony, 464 U.S. at 431; Dowling, 472 U.S. at 228 (reversing 

conviction despite recognition of desire to utilize section 

2314 as a tool to combat copyright infringement).    

	D.	The Consequences of the Government's
		Theory Counsel Against Application of
		the Conspiracy and Wire Fraud Statutes Here.

	An additional factor in the Supreme Court's rejection of 

the government's position in Dowling was the Court's 

recognition that "the rationale supporting application of the 

statute under the circumstances of this case would equally 

justify its use in a wide expanse of the law which Congress 

has evidenced no intention to enter by way of criminal 

sanction."  473 U.S. at 227.  The Court expressed particular 

reluctance to utilize criminal statutes that do not expressly 

refer to copyright infringement to impose criminal penalties 

upon publishers of infringing materials.  The Court referred 

to Harper & Row Publishers, Inc. v. Nation Enterprises, 471 

U.S. 539 (1985), a case in which it had recently held that 

The Nation, a weekly magazine of political commentary, 

infringed former President Ford's copyright by publishing 

verbatim excerpts from his unpublished memoirs.  Noting that 

the government's theory in Dowling would permit prosecution 

of The Nation for interstate transportation of its infringing 

publication under a criminal provision other than the 

Copyright Act, the Court stated that it would "pause, in the 

absence of any explicit indication of congressional 

intention, to bring such conduct within the purview of a 

criminal statute."  473 U.S. at 226.

	Application of the wire fraud statute to the conduct in 

this case raises precisely the same concerns.  If the wire 

fraud statute were applicable to the conduct in the case at 

bar, then it would also apply to anyone who transmits or 

receives even a single infringing copy of a computer software 

program through an electronic bulletin board system or 

through electronic mail, even if the illicit copy were made 

solely for personal use, a result Congress clearly sought to 

avoid.  See Part I.C., supra.  The government's theory is not 

limited to computer software or computer networks, but would 

apply to anyone who copies any type of infringing material 

and who utilizes a computer, telephone, radio, or television, 

transmission or broadcast across state lines in connection 

with such activity.

	Moreover, under the government's theory the charge in 

this case -- conspiracy to commit wire fraud --  would reach 

not only persons who engage in infringing conduct, but also -

- as in this case -- the computer systems operators, 

publishers, and broadcasters whose equipment or media may be 

used by others to carry out such activity.  Just as in 

Dowling, where the Court refused to adopt an interpretation 

of a general criminal statute that could result in criminal 

punishment of magazine publishers for publishing infringing 

materials, so too here this Court should not interpret the 

wire fraud and conspiracy statutes to reach the conduct of a 

systems operator whose BBS is used by others to copy or 

transmit infringing materials, in the absence of any clear 

and definite expression of congressional intent to do so.

	These consequences, it should be noted, implicate First 

Amendment interests and values.  The indictment in this case, 

which for purposes of a motion to dismiss we must take at 

face value, concedes that the defendant was the Systems 

Operator ("SYSOP") of a computerized BBS.  It makes no 

allegation that the BBS was devoted exclusively to the 

copying of copyrighted software, and indeed it concedes that 

the BBS contained not only software, but "files and messages" 

which "can consist of virtually any type of data or 

information."  (Indictment,  7)  Defendant's BBS, therefore, 

must be considered to be a general purpose BBS rather than 

one dedicated solely to the infringement of copyrighted 

software.  The indictment makes no allegation that defendant 

himself uploaded, downloaded, nor copied any copyrighted 

software.  It alleges simply that he maintained the BBS and 

thereby was able "to permit and facilitate" others in their 

copying software ( 5), and to permit others "to avail 

themselves of the opportunity" to do so.  ( 9)  The 

allegations in the indictment paint a picture of someone 

managing a BBS used by a wide variety of people for a variety 

of purposes.  It alleges knowledge that software copying was 

going on, but there is no allegation that defendant provided 

the software to be copied, nor copied it himself.

	It is thus beyond doubt that the defendant was engaged, 

at least to some extent, in First Amendment protected 

activity, wholly aside from the question of the extent to 

which his alleged knowledge and "facilitation" of copying of 

copyrighted software on his general purpose BBS might have 

reduced such constitutional protection in some degree.  Since 

the operation of a computerized BBS is a communicative 

activity, First Amendment concerns limit the extent to which 

blunderbuss criminal statutes and creative prosecutorial 

attempts at extending the reach of the criminal law may be 

tolerated by a court.  Those who are engaged in First 

Amendment activity cannot be confused with those who sell 

ordinary wares, such as food, who may be held strictly liable 

for the merchandise they sell.  See Smith v. California, 361 

U.S. at 154.  Communicative activity needs "breathing space" 

in order to survive.  N.A.A.C.P. v. Button, 381 U.S. 415 

(1963); New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964). 

 Prosecution of an individual such as David LaMacchia under 

the wire fraud statute, given the fact that the Copyright 

statute does not criminalize his activity (see arguments I A-

C, supra), is about as chilling to communicative activity as 

it can get.  Indeed, courts have been very careful to avoid 

holding the common carrier distributors of information even 

civilly liable for such torts as defamation and business 

disparagement.  See Cubby, Inc. v. Compuserve, Inc., 776 

F.Supp. 135 (S.D.N.Y. 1991) (carrier that did not have 

responsibility to "manage, review, create, delete, edit and 

otherwise control the contents" of a computerized 

communications system could not be held liable on "a theory 

of vicarious liability" for the tortious actions of others 

(id at 143), because of the First Amendment).

	E.	The Rule of Lenity Prohibits the
		Application of the Wire Fraud Statute to This Case.
		
	In refusing to extend a more general criminal statute to 

the area of copyright infringement, the Dowling Court invoked 

the "`time-honored interpretive guideline' that `ambiguity 

concerning the ambit of criminal statutes should be resolved 

in favor of lenity.'"  473 U.S. at 228-229 (quoting Liparota 

v. United States, 471 U.S. 419, 427 (1985), quoting Rewis v. 

United States, 401 U.S. 808, 812 (1971)).  See also United 

States v. Enmons, 410 U.S. 396 (1973); United States v. 

Anzalone, 766 F.2d 676 (1st Cir. 1985).  The primary purposes 

underlying the rule of lenity -- (1) to promote fair notice 

to those subject to the criminal laws and (2) to maintain the 

proper balance between Congress, prosecutors and courts -- 

require its application in this case.  

	The rules governing conduct relating to copyright are 

spelled out in detail in the Copyright Act.  Congress has 

amended the Copyright Act twice in the past five years to 

deal specifically with computer software, and has chosen not 

to make the conduct alleged in the indictment a crime.  See 

Pub.L. 101-650 (amending 17 U.S.C. § 109 to limit computer 

software rental); Pub.L. 102-561 (amending 18 U.S.C. §2319 to 

permit felony punishment of commercial computer software 

infringement).  It is reasonable -- indeed it is desirable --

for individuals and businesses to look to the Copyright Act 

in an effort to conform their copyright-related conduct to 

the law.  Nothing in the Copyright Act provides any warning 

that the conduct alleged in the indictment constitutes a 

criminal offense; what message there is, is indeed to the 

contrary.

	The wire fraud statute, in contrast, was enacted in 

1952, long before the computer revolution, and cannot 

reasonably be considered to be a source of software copyright 

rights or duties.  Indeed, we are not aware of any reported 

case in which the systems operator of a BBS has been 

successfully prosecuted for wire fraud or conspiracy to 

commit wire fraud for alleged copyright infringement 

occurring on his or her system.  The government's attempt to 

use the wire fraud and conspiracy statutes to make new law in 

this case clearly violates the "fair warning requirements of 

the due process clause of the fifth amendment."  United 

States v. Anzalone, 766 F.2d at 683.

	In addition to the Due Process/notice problem just 

described, the government's attempt to utilize the wire fraud 

and conspiracy statutes in a manner which Congress neither 

foresaw nor intended threatens to undermine the proper 

balance between Congress, prosecutors and courts, which the 

rule of lenity is intended to preserve.  The Supreme Court 

has repeatedly emphasized that "because of the seriousness of 

criminal penalties, and because criminal punishment usually 

represents the moral condemnation of the community, 

legislatures and not courts should define criminal activity." 

United States v. Bass, 404 U.S. at 348 (cited in Anzalone, 

766 F.2d at 680-681).  As the First Circuit observed in 
Anzalone,

	in our constitutional system the commitment to the 

	separation of powers is too fundamental for us to 

	pre-empt congressional action by judicially 
	
	decreeing what accords with "common sense and the 

	public weal."  Our Constitution vests such 

	responsibilities in the political branches.

766 F.2d at 683.

	In Dowling the Court recognized that lower courts were 
	
attempting "to utilize an existing and readily available tool 

to combat the increasingly serious problem of bootlegging, 

piracy, and copyright infringement," but rejected such 

attempts on the ground that the responsibility for defining 

federal crimes rests with Congress, not with the judiciary:

	the deliberation with which Congress over the last 

	decade has addressed the problem of copyright 

	infringement for profit, as well as the precision 

	with which it has chosen to apply criminal 

	penalties in this area, demonstrates anew the 

	wisdom of leaving it to the legislature to define 

	crime and prescribe penalties.

473 U.S. at 228.  See M. Tigar, Mail Fraud, Morals and U.S. 

Attorneys, 11 Litigation 22, 53 (1984) (arguing that "[i]f 

Congress has regulated in an area, there is little sense in 

letting Assistant United States Attorneys in each judicial 

district think up their own versions of the rules that 

everybody should obey and how they should be punished for 

violating those rules" through the vehicle of the federal 

fraud statutes.)  Similarly, the contrast between the 

precision with which Congress has addressed the problem of 

computer software copyright infringement, both criminal and 

civil, in the Copyright Act, and the serious notice problems 

created by the government's unprecedented attempt to extend 

the reach of the wire fraud and conspiracy statutes to cover 

the conduct in this case, demonstrates the necessity of 

leaving it to Congress to define crime and punishment in the 

copyright area.

			Conclusion
			
 	Here, as in Dowling, "Congress has not spoken with the 

requisite clarity" to prosecute the defendant for conspiracy 

to commit wire fraud.  473 U.S. at 229.  In stark contrast to 

the Copyright Act, which deals explicitly with criminal 

copyright infringement of software, the language of the wire 

fraud statute does not "plainly and unmistakably" cover the 

area of copyright infringement; the purpose of the wire fraud 

statute -- to fill gaps in state law enforcement -- is not 

applicable to the problem of copyright infringement; and the 

rationale utilized to apply the wire fraud statute to the 

defendant's conduct would result in its extension to areas 

which Congress has not indicated any intent to reach.  Id.  

As is evident from the 1990 and 1992 amendments to the 

Copyright Act, Congress is not hesitant to amend the 

Copyright Act as it deems necessary to address changes in 

computer technology and software development.  If Congress 

deems it appropriate to criminalize the type of copyright-

related activity in this case, Congress must do so in 

language that is "clear and definite."  473 U.S. at 214.   

Because the wire fraud statute does not "plainly and 

unmistakably" cover the conduct alleged in the indictment, 

and indeed because the Copyright Act explicitly excludes the 

alleged conduct from the ambit of criminal activity, the 

indictment charging David LaMacchia with conspiracy to commit 

wire fraud must be dismissed.

			Request for Oral Argument
			
	Defendant respectfully requests oral argument on this 
		
motion pursuant to Rule 7.1(D).

DATED: September 30, 1994


Respectfully submitted,
David M. LaMacchia
By his counsel


Sharon L. Beckman (BBO # 552077)
Andrew Good (BBO # 201240)
Harvey A. Silverglate (BBO # 462640)
                                                  
Silverglate & Good
89 Broad St., 14th Floor
Boston, MA  02110
(617) 542-6663, fax 451-6971

                                                  
David Duncan (BBO #546121)
Zalkind, Rodriguez, Lunt & Duncan
65A Atlantic Avenue
Boston, MA  02110
(617) 742-6020, fax 742-3269


Certificate of Service

I, Andrew Good, hereby certify that I have this day 
served the foregoing memorandum on Jeanne Kempthorne, 
Assistant United States Attorney, 1000 Post Office & 
Courthouse, Boston, MA 02109 via hand delivery.




_________________________
Andrew Good

DATED:  September 30, 1994