U.S. Department of Justice
United States Attorney
Eastern  District of  Virginia
                                                                                       
                                                                                  PAUL 
J. McNULTY
UNITED STATES ATTORNEY
2100 Jamieson Avenue
Alexandria, Virginia 22314
703/299-3700
FAX  703/299-3981   Media Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
FEBRUARY 27, 2002

ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA United States Attorney Paul J. McNulty and Michael 
Chertoff, Assistant Attorney General for the Criminal Division, announced 
today the first guilty plea in the Eastern District of Virginia in the 
largest international online copyright piracy investigation conducted by 
federal law enforcement.  John Sankus, Jr., age 28, of Philadelphia, 
Pennsylvania, co-leader of one of the oldest organized software piracy 
groups on the Internet, pled guilty this morning before U.S. District Court 
Judge Leonie M. Brinkema to one felony count of conspiracy to commit 
criminal copyright infringement.  Sankus, who will be sentenced on May 17, 
2002, at 9:00 am,  could receive a maximum sentence of five years in 
federal prison and a $250,000 fine.
Sankus was the co-leader of an international Internet software piracy group 
known as DrinkOrDie.  DrinkOrDie engaged in the illegal distribution of 
copyrighted software, games and movies over the Internet, specializing in 
being the first to release high-end software applications and 
utilities.  DrinkOrDie is one of many highly structured, security conscious 
organizations that illegally reproduce and distribute hundreds of thousands 
of copies of copyrighted works around the world worth billions of dollars 
in losses each year.  Members rarely meet in person and frequently only 
know each other through their screen nicknames.
U.S. Attorney Paul J. McNulty said, "This is a crime against the integrity 
of our electronic infrastructure.  It is imperative that we stop these 
"techno-gangs" from exploiting new technologies for criminal 
purposes.  This plea is another significant step in our effort to eliminate 
intellectual property crime on the Internet and to make it safe for 
individuals and businesses to develop and use new software and 
technologies".  As part of the plea agreement, the United States and Sankus 
agreed that the amount of damage attributable to the defendant's actions, 
during the period charged, exceeds $2.5 million but is less than $5 million.
As co-leader of DrinkOrDie, Sankus was principally responsible for the 
management and supervision of the day-to-day operations of the criminal 
enterprise.  Sankus supervised approximately 60 individuals who acquired, 
cracked, and distributed ("released")  the pirated 
software.  Company  insiders ("suppliers") often provided the group with 
new software, frequently days or weeks before the software would be 
released to the general public.  Group members known as "crackers" would 
defeat the software's embedded copyright protections, allowing the software 
to be illegally reproduced and used by anyone obtaining a copy.  The 
finished product was then quickly distributed to sites located throughout 
the world for further distribution to an ever-expanding web of 
sites.  Within hours, a new release could be found on hundreds of illegal 
sites throughout the world.
DrinkorDie concealed these sites and conducted business in closed 
invite-only Internet relay chat channels.  Sankus and other high ranking 
members of DrinkOrDie used encryption to conceal all e-mails discussing the 
group's illegal activities.  "John Sankus and his group knew what they were 
doing was illegal and they took every technological step possible to 
conceal their activity," said McNulty.
DrinkOrDie was the primary group targeted by "Operation Buccaneer," a 
15-month undercover investigation by the United States Customs Service with 
assistance from the Department of Justice's Computer Crime and Intellectual 
Property Section (CCIPS) and the United States Attorney's Office for the 
Eastern District of Virginia.
On December 11th, the primary investigative phase of Operation Buccaneer 
culminated in the simultaneous execution worldwide of over 70 search 
warrants against targets of the investigation.  To date, warrants and/or 
arrests have been executed in the United States, Australia, Norway, Sweden, 
the United Kingdom and Finland.  Numerous targets of the investigation were 
arrested and taken into custody in the United Kingdom and investigations 
are currently ongoing in each of these countries. "Operation Buccaneer 
brought to light the severity and scope of a multi-billion-dollar software 
swindle perpetrated over the Internet," said U.S. Customs Commissioner 
Robert C. Bonner.  "This investigation is the first of several cases by the 
U.S. Customs Service to dismantle the top groups engaged in this illegal 
activity."
Marty Stansell-Gamm, Chief of CCIPS, said, "The Internet makes it essential 
for law enforcement to cooperate across international borders in order to 
effectively target all members of these warez groups.  Operation Buccaneer 
is an excellent example of how international cooperation can result in 
effective criminal enforcement on a global scale. We are committed to 
protecting the intellectual property rights of this country and will 
continue to work diligently, both here and abroad, to investigate and 
prosecute those individuals and groups who traffic in pirated products."
In addition to the plea agreement entered this morning, the United States 
Attorney expects additional prosecutions in the Eastern District of 
Virginia as a result of the first phase of Operation Buccaneer.  Assistant 
United States Attorney Robert Wiechering, Michael DuBose, Senior Counsel, 
CCIPS, and Michael O'Leary, Trial Attorney, CCIPS, are prosecuting the case 
for the United States.
Further questions may be directed to the United States Attorney's Office. ### 

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