[JURIST] A Belgian court on Thursday found the co-founders of the file-sharing website The Pirate Bay (TPB) [JURIST news archive] not guilty of copyright infringement and electronic communications abuse. According to the Mechelse court [official website, in Dutch], the prosecution failed to prove [Standaard report, in Dutch] that co-founders Gottfrid Svartholm Warg [JURIST news archive] and Fredrik Neij, former website representative Peter Sunde and website investor Carl Lundström were connected to the file sharing site during the period it was under review by the court, as defendants claimed they had no participation in it following its sale in 2006. Olivier Maeterlinch, director of Belgian Entertainment Association (BEA) who is a civil party in this case, stated that, “technically speaking,” they agreed with the court’s ruling.

Last November Neij was arrested [JURIST report] under an Interpol warrant while trying to cross from Laos into Thailand, making him the second Pirate Bay co-founder to be arrested in Southeast Asia. In September 2012 Gottfrid Svartholm Warg was arrested [JURIST report] in Cambodia after an international arrest warrant was issued against him and was sent back to Sweden where he served his sentence for copyright infringement. Originally sentenced to two years in prison, in September 2013 his sentence was reduced [JURIST report] to one year. The Pirate Bay has been the target of many attempts at enforcing internet copyright infringement laws. The Pirate Bay co-founders were convicted of aiding copyright infringement by a Swedish court in 2009.