On January 26, 2010, the UK's Lord Lucas of Crudwell and Dingwall—yes, it's a real title—stood up and told his fellow peers in the House of Lords that the new crop of anti-P2P "settle or we'll sue your trousers off" warning letters were a travesty of justice.

"In a civil procedure on a technical matter, it amounts to blackmail," thundered the libertarian lord-slash-blogger. "The cost of defending one of these things is reckoned to be £10,000. You can get away with asking for £500 or £1,000 and be paid on most occasions without any effort having to be made to really establish guilt. It is straightforward legal blackmail."

The US has had limited experience with the more "entrepreneurial" sorts of copyright lawyers, the ones who send out tens of thousands of letters and threaten expensive prosecutions if alleged P2P users don't settle first for a significant fee. Most such letters on this side of the Atlantic Ocean have come from trade groups like the RIAA who were more interested in education and deterrence than profits (and who actually brought hundreds of cases when people did not choose to settle).

But the UK has had much longer experience with small law firms who go into the business as a way to "monetize" P2P (and make a load of cash for themselves). The best known of the lot is currently ACS Law, a firm run by one Andrew Crossley.

Crossley's modus operandi mirrors the work currently being done in the US by lawyers like Dunlap, Grubb, & Weaver: track IP addresses in BitTorrent swarms, unmask the identities behind them, then send stern letters demanding immediate payouts or tough prosecutions will ensue.

Crossley claimed in April to have pulled in more than £1 million to date through the scheme.

As such letters start to rain down on people across the US, it's worth a look at the reaction to nearly identical ACS Law tactics from the UK to see how this might play out on our shores.

Does anyone actually get sued?



ACS Law remains controversial for many reasons. Many defendants have claimed innocence, and MPs and Lords have been bombarded by constituent complaints about the firm. The methodology for identifying infringers comes from a Swiss firm and remains... less than fully transparent.

And, notably, ACS Law doesn't seem interested in filing actual lawsuits. In January, the BBC noted that despite thousands of letters, ACS Law had yet to sue anyone. This makes the entire operation look like "intimidate into easy settlement" rather than "stand up for my rights in court."

The accusation stings Andrew Crossley of ACS Law, who once claimed that he got into law because he had been a DJ for 25 years and thought law a way into the music business. In a blog post in May, Crossley painted his reticence to sue in a more noble light.

"It is suggested that I never issue any claims," he wrote. "This is not true. It is fair and correct to say that I try to avoid litigation wherever possible and exhaust all other avenues falling short of litigation prior to proceedings being issued, but proceedings have been and will continue to be issued in appropriate cases. Litigation has always been the final option in the processes I invoke on behalf of my clients and the number and frequency of such actions is shortly to increase significantly."

Whatever the case, Crossley's tactics have outraged some members of the House of Lords. While debating the Digital Economy bill that passed earlier this year, spirited debate broke out about dealing with companies like ACS Law.

Lord Lucas even introduced an amendment called "Remedy for groundless threats of copyright infringement proceedings."

"This amendment arose as another attempt to deal with the problem caused by ACS Law and others in their harassment of people with allegations that they have downloaded copyright[ed] material," he said on January 20.

"This would have the benefit of providing a defense against law firms—doubtless the Minister has received as many e-mails and letters as I have concerning the activities of this particular firm—that just repeat endless allegations and threats, with no intention that I can see of actually going to court. It would give their victims some means of biting back; it would take only one in 100 victims to do so and bring a successful court case to bring this practice to an end."

Depression, stroke, blindness



Crossley and his firm face legal problems over their work. Complaints have poured in to the Solicitors Regulation Authority, which controls lawyers in England and Wales.

An SRA case against Crossley is pending over his letter-writing campaign, though he declared in April, "I have faith that the SRA will remain implacable and objective throughout its deliberations. The facts, processes, procedures and compliance should be the focus of their investigation, not the remonstrations of less than 3 percent of those to whom my firm has written."

Crossley has been in trouble with regulators before. In 2002, the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal ordered him to pay £1,250. In a separate incident in 2006 (PDF), the Tribunal demanded he "pay a fine of £1,000, such penalty to be forfeit to Her Majesty the Queen." He also had to pay costs of £3,348.75.

In both of these cases, Crossley had not submitted an accountant's yearly report on his firm—needed under UK rules to show that a lawyer does not improperly hang on to client funds.

The problem appeared to stem from a lack of funds. At one point, he told the tribunal handling his case that his lack of paperwork was "because he had been unable to raise the money to pay the accountant who retained the papers."

Crossley suffered "an extended period of clinical depression in 1999" and then a stroke in 2000. "The effect of the stroke, which caused him to lose his sight altogether for a brief period, was that the Respondent could not work full-time for a period and as a consequence he quickly got into financial difficulties."

This helps to explain his lack of filing in 1999 and 2000. As for the missing filings in 2002 and 2003, those were because his financial problems continued through the middle of 2004.

By 2008, Crossley was doing better. He had founded ACS Law and ended up representing people like Vince Acors, the British telecom exec who became an international news item when he was accused of having sex on a Dubai beach. (If you're ever in Dubai, don't do this.)

At some point after this, Crossley decided to go into the settlement letter business. The first letters went out in mid-2009 and Crossley claims to have pulled in more than £1 million in the year since.

That may have helped with the finances, but it didn't do much for his public relations effort—you know it's bad when even the major music labels tell the BBC, "We don't favor the approach taken by ACS Law to tackle illegal file-sharing."

ACS Law has stirred up so much anger that entire blogs are now dedicated to trashing the firm, and the major consumer group Which? has taken to running stories about Crossley and others engaged in the same business.

In January, Which? noted that it had "heard from more than 150 consumers who believed they had been wrongly accused."

One letter writer told Which?, "My 78 year-old father yesterday received a letter from ACS law demanding £500 for a porn file he is alleged to have downloaded. He doesn’t even know what file sharing or bittorrent is so has certainly not done this himself or given anyone else permission to use his computer to do such a thing."

Crossley has also threatened those who disparage him, even in the US. Earlier this year, he threatened to sue website Slyck.com for defamation after a forum poster referred to ACS Law's "five point plan" as a "wank plan." The EFF got involved and told Crossley to go pound sand.

And the negative reactions aren't restricted to consumer groups and outraged Internet users. They extend even to the House of Lords, where several peers used debate time this year to make clear just how much they dislike ACS Law and its tactics.