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Guest post by Stephen Carlisle of Nova Southeastern UniversityIn the legal world, you just can’t make stuff up. I said it over a year ago. Now, two courts have said the same thing.Recall back in July of 2016, The U.S. Department of Justice announced that going forward, performing rights organization ASCAP and BMI would have to end their practice of offering “fractional licenses.” In other words, ASCAP and BMI only licensed the rights that they had. Makes sense, right? Nope. “This must stop,” said the Department of Justice, “if you own part of the work, you must license the whole work.” Despite this rule contradicting the way the PRO’s have always done business, nothing in the consent decrees provided for this. At the time, I wrote that in effect the DOJ had simply made up a new rule, without complying with any of the formalities of issuing a new rule. 1This led the DOJ to claim that the 100% licensing rule had always been a part of the consent decree, despite there being absolutely no language that indicated this. 2 Again, they just made it up. BMI immediately took the matter to the Court that oversees the consent decree. 3 The Court minced no words in ruling against the DOJ:“Nothing in the Consent Decree gives support to the Division’s views.(emphasis added) If a fractionally-licensed composition is disqualified from inclusion in BMI’s repertory, it is not for violation of any provision of the Consent Decree. While the Consent Decree requires BMI to license performances of those compositions ‘the right of public performances of which [BMI] has or hereafter shall have the right to license or sublicense’ (Art. II(C)), it contains no provision regarding the source, extent, or nature of that right. It does not address the possibilities that BMI might license performances of a composition without sufficient legal right to do so, or under a worthless or invalid copyright, or users might perform a music composition licensed by fewer than all of its creators.”The DOJ should have stopped right there. Instead, they took an appeal to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals. The DOJ fared no better.- You Can’t Make This Stuff Up! The Department of Justice v. ASCAP↩
- ASCAP and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad DOJ Decision That’s Going to Create Chaos in the Music Industry ↩
- United States of America v. Broadcast Music, Inc. 207 F.Supp3d 374 S.D.N.Y. 2016 ↩
- United States of America v. Broadcast Music, Inc. 2017 WL 6463063 2d Circuit 2017 ↩
- BMI, Department of Justice Square Off in Appeals Court Over Latest Consent Decree Ruling ↩
- 4/6/17 Florida Supreme Court Oral Arguments: Flo & Eddie, Inc., etc., v. Sirius XM Radio, Inc., etc., SC16-1161 ↩
- Telling Timeline of Google Guardian’s Government Influence ↩
- How Google Took Over the Justice Department Antitrust Division: Renata Hesse’s Timeline ↩