INTERNATIONAL CABLE PIRATE SENTENCED TO FIVE YEARS IN US PRISON
The case was the product of an extensive investigation jointly conducted by the Sacramento Valley Hi Tech Crimes Task Force, the Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation Unit, and the United States Secret Service, with the assistance of the United States Postal Inspection Service.
Poll had previously pleaded guilty to eight felony charges of assisting in the unlawful interception and reception of communications services offered over a cable system.
In sentencing Poll, Judge Levi stated that Poll was a “scofflaw” who committed a “serious economic offense.”
The Court, through Judge Levi, further noted that defendant had been “defiant”of previous injunctions issued by other courts which barred Poll's involvement in descrambler manufacturing and sales.
In addition to imposing a sentence of five years, the Court imposed a fine of $350,000, and ordered that the Poll be placed on supervised release for a period of three years following his sentence. Poll was remanded into custody immediately to begin serving his sentence.
According to Assistant United States Attorney S. Robert Tice-Raskin, who prosecuted the case, between approximately June, 1998 and December, 2003, Poll and a co-defendant, Carlo Mireles, doing business as Wholesale Electronics and Red Rock Group, Ltd., operated a business which manufactured and sold cable television descramblers allowing illicit access to cable programming.
They advertised the descramblers extensively through a series of web sites on the Internet and also through national magazines. The companies and their employees manufactured and sold the devices from facilities located in Simi Valley, California and/or Las Vegas, Nevada.
The devices were specifically modified and/or designed to allow consumers to receive premium and pay-per-view cable television programming without the knowledge or authorization of cable operators.
Consumers across the United States and in various foreign countries were able to use the descramblers to receive unlimited cable programming for free, depriving cable operators of subscription fees for the pirated programming.
Although it was not proven in court, the Justice Department believed that defendants sold approximately 100,000 illicit descramblers and received over $12 million in revenue from these sales.
The judge, through the complicated processes of the Court proceedings that took almost a decade, determined that the “infringement amount,” a reasonable estimate of the pecuniary harm caused to cable operators through loss of programming revenue, was over $7 million. In a pending civil forfeiture action, the United States, through the Justice Department is also seeking to forfeit approximately $244,000 in proceeds of the cable piracy offense.
The co-defendant Mireles, age 32, previously from Las Vegas, Nevada, and currently a resident of Captain Cook, Hawaii, also pleaded guilty to charges related to the scheme in 2004 and is currently scheduled for sentencing on June 14, 2007.

