The Pirate Bay, often attacked by the Swedish establishment, but never beaten. However, their faith in the judicial system has plummeted after prosecutors have stated that Jim Keyzer, a police official investigating the Pirate Bay, has done no wrong by working for Warner at the same time.

You probably know the story by now. Jim Keyzer, a Police IT forensics specialist who was leading the Pirate Bay investigation, let it slip he was working for Warner on a social networking site. A strange move to say the least.

Soon after the news got out it became clear that Keyzer had started working for the movie studio before the Pirate Bay investigation was closed. Warner denied this initially, and stated that the investigator was not employed or paid by the movie studio while he was still working on the case.

However, after The Pirate Bay crew filed criminal complaints for bribery of a police officer, Warner suddenly admitted he was working for them.

Pirate Bay co-founder Peter Sunde was convinced that they had a strong case, as he said: “He [Keyzer] confirmed that he is an employee there [Warner Bros’] and we can’t see it in any other way than this being the reward for work well done from the new employer of the police, the entertainment industry”

However, in a letter received today by Peter Sunde, Kay Engfeldt of the prosecutors department states that there will be no investigation into Jim Keyzer. “[there is] no reason to believe that a crime has been committed by anyone employed by the police.”

Of course, until you investigate, you won’t find any evidence. That’s why in general allegations are investigated first, especially when there is evidence to back up the claim. Sunde told TorrentFreak that they would be filing an appeal on Monday.

In the meantime, they’re working on a datacenter move for their secondary sites, whichÂ hadÂ left services like Bayimg unavailable for a time.