Kraft Wins Preliminary Injunction Against Helm
CBLDF defendant Stu Helm has lost the first round in his battle against corporate censorship. Magistrate Judge Arlander Keys handed down a 32 page decision granting Kraft's request for preliminary injunction against Helm's use of the nickname "King VelVeeda." The injunction prohibits Helm from using the name on his Website or in any commercial context. The decision freezes Helm's ability to sell original art created before the injunction unless he physically removes the nickname from the piece, effectively defacing each original image. It also blocks the sale of "Singles and Seconds," a collection of single page erotic vignettes.
The Magistrate's decision further orders Helm to remove the nickname
from all Web pages, metatags, and search engines. Helm has spent the weeks
since the decision painstakingly obliterating all references to the name
from his site. His next court date is July 29 where he will demonstrate
full compliance with the Judge's orders.
The CBLDF's legal team has filed an appeal to the Magistrate's decision.
Presently we are awaiting a decision on the appeal, following which a
trial date will be set. However, the decision on the appeal may take months
to come through. Meanwhile, the Fund is nearing the five figure mark in
case expenses and needs to build funds to fight the next round.
"They already took my name," Stu Helm says, "and in court
I could be fighting for my life." Part of the terms of Kraft's suit
is that if Helm loses he may have to pay Kraft's legal fees plus punitive
damages. The Fund's legal team estimates Kraft's expenses are nearing
six figures. The longer the case is delayed, the sharper their fees escalate,
and the more urgent Stu's plight becomes.
CBLDF Director Charles Brownstein explains, "We leapt onto
this case when it was already in motion with all our legal guns. Unfortunately
the judge felt that the balance of harms favored Kraft's commercial speech
over Helm's artistic speech, but that doesn't mean that Stu's case has
been weakened. The preliminary injunction needed to show Kraft having
a fair shot at prevailing in the trial, it doesn't mean that they're right,
and it certainly doesn't mean that they'll win. It's still early in the
process, and we intend to keep fighting."
"With trademark and copyright laws in a state of flux, it's important
to fight these instances of corporate censorship," explains Fund
Board Member Louise Nemschoff. "If Kraft prevails, the precedent
could be damaging not only to comic book creators poking fun at corporate
culture, but to musicians, filmmakers, and other artists making use of
puns or homonyms of corporate marks."
"This case is about what is protected as free speech," says
CBLDF legal counsel Ken Levinson. "We would be remiss in our
duties if we didn't protect a comic book artist like Stu while that battle
is being waged in the higher courts. Comics are a place where precedents
are set in entertainment law, and we have to fight to ensure that a bad
precedent isn't set here."
To Support the CBLDF's continuing defense of Stu Helm and other casework
make a donation on CBLDF.com