Canada’s Gary Bowser was jailed for his involvement last year after being indicted in 2020 With a Nintendo hacking group called Team-Xecuter (opens in new tab)The complaint relates to his role as a salesperson and promoter of Team-Xecuter’s hardware and hacking tools, and Bowser pleaded guilty to his involvement. The U.S. government sought a five-year prison sentence, but Bowser’s leniency was probably the only one he received. He was jailed for 40 months in February 2022 (opens in new tab), now allowed for early release after 12 months. He is currently at a processing center in the US and will be back in Toronto next week.
But things don’t end there. The majority of the lawsuit against Team-Xecutor was the financial damage it caused Nintendo, with the court slapping Bowser for an astronomical $14.5 million total award.
Bowser recently allowed journalist Nick Moses to do a video interview (thank you torrent freak (opens in new tab)), unfortunately the fact that he’s still in a federal facility means there’s a terrible repercussion to the audio. Yes, and because this debt takes precedence, Bowser pays $25 a month out of prison wages, making a total of $175 to date.
“The agreement with them is that the maximum they can take is 25 to 30 percent of your total monthly income,” Bowser said. [after release] before you start paying. ”
Gary Bowser is in his fifties and needs to earn about $40 million in total to pay off this debt. Financially speaking, this is a life sentence.
Clearly, criminal behavior cannot be tolerated. Stealing a Nintendo game is just theft. Gary Bowser did something bad, but in the end he dealt with it and is clearly a role model. It’s even worse when you consider that he was the public face of Team-Xecutor rather than carrying out operations. Bowser was arrested in Tanzania but managed to avoid extradition to the United States, and was indicted along with unindicted French national Max Luan and unarrested Yuanning Chen. Nintendo claimed Team-Xecutor made millions in revenue, but Bowser’s lawyers told the court that his clients were being paid between $500 and $1,000 a month. (The judge even conceded that his Bowser’s role in the scheme was minor when handing down the ruling).
Your mileage may vary, but locking someone up for a year feels like punishment enough for being involved in video game piracy. It feels overly punitive to make the multi-billion dollar corporations they prey on pay for the rest of their lives. Trying to ruin a man’s life remains almost unbelievable.