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International - Written by The Guardian on Saturday, January 28, 2012 1:14 - 0 Comments
Kim Dotcom’s brash jetset image ‘hid sharp business mind’
He lived a life dominated by fast cars, holidays on m super-yachts and an obsession with shoot ‘em up computer games. But on Wednesday associates of Kim Dotcom, the former hacker wanted by the FBI over download sites allegedly costing copyright holders at least 0m (£320m), claimed his cartoon-like image was carefully calculated to help earn him a fortune. In fact, they said, it obscured a sharp and decisive business intelligence.
Dotcom, the 38-year-old German founder of Megaupload.com formerly known as Kim Schmitz, was on Wednesday refused bail by a New Zealand judge who warned he may try to flee the country if he were released from jail pending an extradition hearing on 22 February concerning online piracy charges in the US.
Citing the discovery of unlicensed and illegal guns at Dotcom’s rented mansion north of Auckland, where he was arrested with three others on Saturday, David McNaughton said “flight risk remains a real and significant possibility, which I cannot discount”.
Dotcom appeared at North Shore district court wearing an all-black outfit. Speaking afterwards his lawyer, Paul Davison, said he was “very disappointed” and that Dotcom “has no intention whatsoever of endeavouring to leave New Zealand”. He said his client would appeal against the decision.
Public fascination with the Megaupload case has been fuelled this week by details of Dotcom’s flamboyant lifestyle, conducted under a variety of aliases, including Kimble, King Kimble and Kim Tim Jim Vestor.
In 2001, for example, he embarked on a lavish trip to Monaco involving a fleet of supercars, a huge yacht and helicopters. Dotcom also commissioned a documentary for the occasion, which was fronted by a riotous shockhaired German TV comedian, Frank Lämmermann. The real purpose, a former associate who organised the holiday told the Guardian, was to create a sense of greater wealth than Dotcom actually had while he was raising finance for new businesses.
“The parties were in part advertising and PR,” said the associate, who spoke on condition of anonymity. “He wanted to show how he was the biggest and greatest and how he had money. Back in 2000 he didn’t have as much money as he showed the world he did.”
The film Kimble Does Monaco shows his entourage on board the Golden Odyssey with bikini-clad women, including Playboy model Gitta Saxx. In one scene a group of semi-naked women is sprayed with champagne by the yacht’s pool while “Captain Kim” looks on, decked out in black suit and polo neck and black and white shoes. In another scene he is serenaded by his cronies around a grand piano, before they decamp to watch the Monte Carlo grand prix from a party room directly above the starting grid.
The flamboyance and cult of personality masked not only his intelligence, but also his background and true personality, the associate said.
“I was close to him, but I never really know what he was thinking about. Sometimes he was a really nice guy and at other times he was awful. But he was really good at bringing people around him and getting them to do their best for him. He was able to talk to them and motivate them to do what he wanted.
“He never talked about his childhood, though I believe he had no contact with his father. He was a bit like the fat boy with no friends who only had his computer.”
Indeed, even as the FBI was finalising a charge sheet over Christmas, accusing him of racketeering and money laundering in one of the largest criminal copyright cases ever brought by the US, Dotcom posted a video of himself becoming the world’s leading player of Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3, a computer game which he spent dozens of hours playing. His colleagues marked the achievement of the best “kill to death ratio” by whooping and firing confetti over him and preparing a celebratory cake in the shape of a number 1.
Another former business colleague, again speaking anonymously, said Dotcom was “a very smart guy, very clever, very quick on the uptake, very driven, very pedantic”. While he was trustworthy – “within reason” – he at times showed symptoms of “anger issues”, and too often “thought money could fix everything”, she said. “He likes playing God.”
Dotcom grew up in Kiel, near Hamburg. Having started as a hacker, he then helped firms with IT security. By 2000 he had founded a venture capital firm, Kimvestor, began to make his fortune and became a fixture on Munich’s party scene. As the dotcom bubble burst in early 2001, he bought shares in a struggling website and promised to invest more before cashing-in as the share price rose. Then things went wrong. He was arrested in Thailand in January 2002 and spent five months in jail before being convicted in Munich of insider trading. He was sentenced to 20 months’ probation and fined €100,000.
He recently said he had come to regret flaunting his wealth, and defended his conduct during the dotcom high. “My mistake was that I embraced the media and gave them the stories they wanted,” he wrote on the website Torrent Freak in December. “Let’s just put this into the category ‘young and stupid’. I was giving them a glimpse into my exclusive lifestyle. For this openness I was turned into the scapegoat when the German new economy bubble popped in 2000.
“I was convicted for insider trading (actually saving a company and over 120 jobs) and got a probation sentence because the judge and prosecutor offered a deal to my lawyers. My criminal record has been cleared under Germany’s clean slate legislation. Officially I can say I am without convictions. I made mistakes when I was young and I paid the price. I am 37 years old now, I am married, I have three adorable children with two more on the way (twin girls – yeah) and I know that I am not a bad person. I have grown and I have learned.”
Neighbours close to Dotcom’s rented 12-hectare property near Auckland have confirmed he had adopted a relatively low profile before his arrest. “We see him driving around, but he keeps to himself and we’re quite close neighbours,” said Libbi Darroch, as she groomed her 7-year-old showjumper Muffy at the Coatesville pony club. “I’ve seen him driving around with his ‘GUILTY’ number plate.”
But regardless of this lower profile, the FBI indictment of Dotcom and four others calls for the forfeiture of cash worth £175m and listed 57 bank accounts in Australia, Slovakia, the Philippines, the Netherlands, Singapore, China, Germany and New Zealand. The list of assets included 15 Mercedes cars with number plates including STONED, MAFIA and POLICE, as well as Maserati, a Rolls-Royce Phantom with the number plate GOD, and a Lamborghini, along with 60 computer servers and various sculptures and artworks.
The indictment also alleges that between April and June last year, Dotcom’s companies paid almost m to rent yachts in the Mediterranean.
Meanwhile in the Netherlands, the prosecutor’s office said Dutch police had arrested a fifth suspect in the alleged conspiracy, identified in the US as Andrus Nomm, a 32-year-old Estonian. He has been detained for 60 days pending an extradition request.
guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010
Published via the Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress.
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Enterprise IT, News - May 22, 2012 16:18 - 0 Comments
Govt pushes ahead with cloud-sharing approach
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News, Telecommunications - May 22, 2012 11:15 - 48 Comments
NBN here to stay under Coalition, says analyst
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Gadgets, News - May 21, 2012 12:32 - 5 Comments
Galaxy S III listed for Telstra, Optus and Vodafone
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Reviews - May 7, 2012 18:16 - 2 Comments
Telstra Mobile Wi-Fi 4G: Review
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