On 16 Jun 2019, at 3:59 PM, Mueller, Milton L 
<mil...@gatech.edu<mailto:mil...@gatech.edu>> wrote:
...
Actually, it doesn't. It raises a highly speculative possibility that in some 
future world, someone in a revocation case MIGHT argue that ARIN has a 
financial incentive to recover the resources, and that that argument MIGHT 
affect the outcome, and that it might affect it in a way that is bad. The legal 
assessment provides no reason to conclude that this speculative possibility 
outweighs the clear benefits of efficient disposition of the resources. The 
legal assessment does not explain why the financial incentive behind nonpayment 
of fees is different from the financial incentive of auction proceeds. The 
assessment doesn’t entertain the possibility that a financial incentive to 
ensure compliance might be a good thing.

Milton -

Consider that revocation in a matter of fraud & revocation, such as was 
recently performed and documented here - 
<https://teamarin.net/2019/05/13/taking-a-hard-line-on-fraud/>

In such a situation, our revocation is compliant with terms of service in the 
registration services agreement, with a successful result facilitating recovery 
of resources fraudulently obtained and their reissurance to the community.  
Both ARIN and its community benefit from appropriate administration of number 
resources in region, but there is no significant financial benefit to ARIN.  If 
instead ARIN were revoking the resources with the intent of monetizing them 
(approximate $10M USD value) with ARIN being the recipient of financial 
proceeds, it would be trivial to argue that ARIN’s pursuit of the matter was 
being motivated out of more than just proper administration of number resources 
in the region, but rather was the result of being a party with a strong 
financial interest in the outcome.

I am not a lawyer, but can say from firsthand experience that ARIN’s present 
stance as administrator and steward of the registry makes dealing with many 
disputes rather straightforward, and if we were a party of significant 
financial interest in the outcomes, then there are various legal options for 
enforcement that would become quite challenging or altogether unavaialble, and 
thus require us to go further down the litigation/arbitration to obtain the 
appropriate outcomes for the community.  This is not a “highly speculative” 
outcome of monetization, but rather inevitable outcome as judges reasonable 
view claims/motions by parties with strong financial motivation as requiring a 
greater degree of exploration of facts, and such exploration requires moving 
past “pretrial” and into the fact-finding and arguing phase of a case.  With 
enough effort, we’re likely to achieve the same outcome in the end, but it is 
readily apparent to be that becoming a party with a strong financial incentive 
in this manner will raise the cost and uncertainty of our legal proceedings.

If ARIN’s policies directed that we would monetize the recovered resources 
(even if then using the proceeds for the benefit of the community), I am 
confident that we would be still be in litigation over the particular fraud 
referenced above.
Such a consequence shouldn’t prevent the community from considering any policy 
it desires, but rather serves to inform that a policy options that makes ARIN a 
highly-interested partly financially will inevitably add some costs and 
uncertainty to our legal proceedings regarding revocation/reclamation.

Thanks,
/John

John Curran
President and CEO
American Registry for Internet Numbers

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