New Zealand top court lets tech exile Kim Dotcom appeal extradition order to US
- The German national, who is accused of netting millions from his file-sharing empire, faces charges carrying jail terms of up to 20 years
New Zealand’s top court will hear Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom’s final appeal against extradition to the United States on fraud and online piracy charges, judges said on Thursday.
The German national, who is accused of netting millions from his file-sharing empire, faces charges of racketeering, fraud and money laundering in the US, carrying jail terms of up to 20 years.
A panel of five Supreme Court judges unanimously rejected an argument from lawyers representing the US that they did not have the power to hear appeals from Dotcom and his three co-accused.
“We conclude that we have jurisdiction to entertain the proposed appeals,” they said in a written judgment.
Dotcom lived in Hong Kong for five years from 2003 before moving to New Zealand. Megaupload had an office in the territory that was raided by 100 customs officers working with the FBI in 2011.
The Supreme Court is Dotcom’s last avenue of legal appeal in New Zealand and had its judges accepted the US argument, he would have been out of options. But the decision means he has one more chance to overturn a court ruling that he should be sent to the US to face charges.