Why Do The Police Call In The RIAA To Investigate Potential Crimes?
from the that-doesn't-seem-right dept

http://techdirt.com/articles/20080915/0212372271.shtml

We've long known that the boundary between US law enforcement and the 
enforcement wings of certain lobbyist organizations like the RIAA is way 
too blurry, but TorrentFreak is raising some important questions about 
why the police will call in RIAA investigators on certain cases, such as 
one where a speeding stop in Illinois resulted in a cop calling in the 
RIAA after spindles of writeable DVDs and CDs was found in the car. 
While the RIAA and law enforcement have a history of working closely 
together (and many people go back and forth between the two), the RIAA 
is still a highly biased party here, and shouldn't be involved in 
investigations where it has a personal stake. While some politicians are 
trying to turn US law enforcement into the private police of the 
entertainment industry, that doesn't mean that police should just 
consider RIAA investigators their peers. So can anyone explain why RIAA 
investigators should be allowed to be involved in such cases and why no 
one's called US law enforcement on things like this before?
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