N.C. Faces New Federal Claims in Blackbeard Copyright Case!
The infamous pirate Blackbeard was once the scourge of the
Atlantic but over 300 years later a different kind of pirate sails North
Carolina’s waters. And a case heard at the United States Supreme Court has
returned to Raleigh. On February 8th, 2023 filmmaker Frederick Allen of
Nautilus Productions, filed an amended complaint in Allen v.
Cooper against the state of North Carolina and the North Carolina
Department of Natural and Cultural Resources (NCDNCR) over the misuse of
Allen’s copyrighted footage of Blackbeard’s shipwreck, the Queen Anne’s
Revenge. According to the complaint filed in U.S. District Court for the
Eastern District of North Carolina, North Carolina pirated Allen’s footage of
Blackbeard’s flagship, and then passed “Blackbeard’s
Law” (N.C. §121-25(b)) in 2015 to
justify that misuse.
North Carolina has argued that Allen and other creators are barred
from suing states and state entities for copyright infringement, even though
states can sue their own citizens for infringing use of copyrighted works
created by those very same states, under the guise of “Sovereign Immunity.” Allen’s lawsuit alleges the above inequity in federal
copyright law and the passage of North Carolina’s “Blackbeard’s Law,” illegally
converted Nautilus’ footage of Blackbeard’s flagship, the Queen Anne’s
Revenge, into the public domain. The lawsuit further alleges that
North Carolina violated Allen’s 5th and 14th Amendment
Constitutional rights through the passage of Blackbeard’s Law, and that
Blackbeard’s Law represents a Bill of Attainder, or targeted punishment of an
individual by the Legislature, which is specifically prohibited in the U.S.
Constitution. Allen is also seeking an injunction to enjoin North Carolina from
engaging in further copyright infringements or takings.
Allen stated, “The Copyright Clause and the 5th and
14th Amendments to the Constitution are meant to protect citizens from unjust
and illegal takings of their property without due process or compensation. This
lawsuit will benefit all creators, who drive the American economy, and help
protect them from intellectual property theft by states. Nowhere in the federal
copyright statutes are states exempted from copyright law or immune from
lawsuits - yet North Carolina argues just that.”
For nearly two decades, Nautilus Productions was the official
video crew for the Blackbeard’s Queen Anne’s Revenge Shipwreck
Project. Nautilus Productions documented
archaeological activities and the recovery of artifacts from Blackbeard’s
infamous shipwreck for the benefit of, and at zero cost to, the taxpayers of
North Carolina. Nautilus’ footage of Blackbeard’s shipwreck has aired worldwide
on the BBC, the History Channel, the Discovery Channel, National Geographic and
many more.
The shipwreck was discovered in 1996 by Intersal, Inc. which has filed a separate breach of contract lawsuit in
North Carolina state court. The state of North Carolina and the North Carolina
Department of Natural and Cultural Resources (NCDNCR) are defendants in that
lawsuit. That case awaits a trial date in North Carolina’s Business Court.
The filing in Allen v. Cooper can be accessed here – https://illusionofmore.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/Allen-Amended-Complaint_NC.pdf
Nautilus
Productions LLC is represented by Susan Freya Olive, solive@oliveandolive.com -
(919) 683-5514 and David McKenzie, DMcKenzie@oliveandolive.com -
(919) 683-5514 of Olive and Olive, P.A., Joe
Poe, joe@poelaw.com - (919)
810-0311, of the Poe
Law Firm, PLLC, and Adam Adler, aadler@reichmanjorgensen.com - (650)
623-1480, of Reichman
Jorgensen Lehman & Feldberg LLP.
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