back to article US cons attempt copyright-based prison break

Four inmates of Oklahoma's El Reno federal prison were yesterday indicted for what must rate as the most audicious prison break scheme in history, the Washington Post reports. Clayton Heath Albers, Carl Ervin Batts, Barry Dean Bischof and Russell Dean Landers are alleged to have copyrighted their names then "demanded millions …

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  1. Rich Silver badge

    Extortion

    ...and a $250,000 fine on a charge of "mailing threatening communications with the intent to extort"

    Are you sure they don't work for the RIAA?

  2. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Only in the USA...

    Would it have worked if the guy they hired wasn't an FBI agent I wonder? Even MS managed to scare Novell-SuSE into a shotgun wedding. Blackmail? Nah, just trying to enforce copyright laws guv.

  3. Chris Thorpe

    Look on the bright side

    The RIAA will testify on their behalf at their next parole hearings

  4. Dillon Pyron

    News of the Weird

    This has got to make News of the Weird, even if I have to mail it in. Classic case of criminals too dumb for their own good.

    "The RIAA will testify on their behalf at their next parole hearings"

    And have job offers?

  5. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Re: Copyrighting names

    From what I've seen in the U.S., there is widespread belief among inner-city minorities that "common law" copyright can be claimed in a person's name, and is secured merely by publishing a paid announcement of that claim in any obscure, limited-distribution neighborhood advertising rag.

    It's clear from such "legal notices" that the "owners" believe there exists an animal that combines trademark with copyright. Violations automatically result in forfeiture of the offender's personal assets up to the penalty amount announced in the "legal notice," and judges have no hesitation (or discretion) in ordering turnover without contest.

    Given that context, no surprise that a jailhouse lawyer hatched this plan.

  6. Pascal Monett Silver badge

    Something I'm missing here

    Aren't these guys in prison ? How did they get in contact with the FBI guy, by posting a notice on the Web ?

    Aren't prisoners supposed to be shut off from society during their term, or am I just thinking like last century ?

    I'm all for reintegrating prisoners into society - else they'll just end up back in prison (happens a lot anyway from what I hear) - but when they are in jail their communications with outside should really be controlled better.

  7. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Anybody like to let Pascal in on it

    Now I know you don't think the FBI has

    people doing this just for grins . Prisoners

    computer time is strictly monitored

    it was a matter of simply giving them some rope they are

    watched, video'd and every bit of communication is filtered

    Just thought I would clear that up.

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