Cohen: 'I Will Prevail in Sex.com Case'

MONTE CARLO - Despite the recent dismissal of an appeal he filed to a $65 million ruling against him, Steve Cohen feels he will ultimately clear his name in the long-running Sex.com case.

“I believe this is all going to go back to square one,” Cohen told XBiz, “and if it does, I will prevail.” Cohen said that a series of judicial missteps and outright lies would bring the case back to trial.

Cohen has been battling San Francisco’s Gary Kremen for domain and trademark rights to Sex.com since 1995. Kremen registered the domain with Network Solutions (now Verisign) a year earlier, but Cohen said he had been using that name since 1989. The 2001 ruling that found Cohen guilty of stealing the domain using forged documents was erroneous, he said.

“We know the document was a forgery,” Cohen said. “But so what? Kremen didn’t own the rights in the first place.”

Cohen described a scenario in which “a roommate of Kremen’s roommate” who might not have had the authority to do so, signed over rights to Sex.com.

Cohen, who once owned the L.A. Free Love Society in the late 1960s as well as early adult Internet bulletin board the French Connection BBS, now keeps homes in London, Amsterdam and Monte Carlo from where he administers Eastern European casinos and a construction company. He is planning to build a hotel and casino in Macau.

But Cohen’s fight with Kremen once landed him in a Mexican jail. His assets had been frozen unexpectedly during one stage of the trial, he said, and he went to Mexico to retrieve two cashier’s checks prior to a wire transfer. Mexican authorities arrested him for attempting to remove that large of an amount of money from the country. Warrants were issued for his arrest in the United States, Cohen said, but Mexico would not let him leave.

“Mexican jails are not pretty,” Cohen related. “You have to have your family bring you food. A friend had to put up his house for my bail.”

Cohen lamented the proliferation of what he called false documents on the Internet. “People believe something if they read it enough times,” he said. He referred to a story he’d read (corroborated by Kremen) in which Cohen eluded Kremen’s lawyer’s subpoena by not cashing checks Kremen had sent under an assumed name. Instead Cohen returned them with a blow-up doll and a note reading “Nice try.”

“The checks were under Gary’s name,” Cohen stated, “and I didn’t send a note. I did send a blow-up doll.”

Cohen is alternately sanguine and optimistic about the results of a new trial. “If I win, I win,” he said. “If I lose, I lose. But I have no doubt that I will win if this comes back.”

Cohen believes that the Sex.com site is near-worthless. “With all the P2P networks out there, like Kazaa and LimeWire, people can get their sex for free,” he said. With Kremen and Sex.com, “you got a guy basically running a search engine.”

“People see the word sex and they think it’s interesting,” Cohen told XBiz. “We know it’s not interesting.”

Both Kremen and Cohen grudgingly admire their opponents. In separate interviews, each referred to the other as “an intelligent guy.”

“Stephen Cohen is an international fugitive and a convicted criminal,” Gary Kremen told XBiz. “But I’d have drinks with him in Monte Carlo.”

Copyright © 2024 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More News

'The Only People Who've Been Hurt by This Are My Wife and Me': An Exclusive Interview With Joe Gow

Only hours after the Universities of Wisconsin Board of Regents took the unusually extreme step of firing veteran communications professor Joe Gow — stripping him of tenure for creating and appearing in adult content — XBIZ spoke exclusively with him about his case.

Creator of Hentaied Universe Launches All-Access Streaming Service 'Hentaied Pro'

Romero Mr. Alien, the creator of the Hentaied Universe, has launched a new streaming service combining all eight of his brands on one website, Hentaied.Pro.

Adult Time Partners With VR Brands TabooVR, ForbVR

Adult Time has partnered with TabooVR and ForbVR to expand the VR offerings on its content platform.

U of Wisconsin Fires Tenured Prof. Joe Gow Over OnlyFans Content

The Universities of Wisconsin Board of Regents has fired veteran communications professor Joe Gow, stripping him of tenure for unremorsefully creating and appearing in adult content.

California Tightens Restrictions on Subscription Auto-Renewals

California this week enacted a new law that significantly tightens the rules regarding automatic renewal of paid website subscriptions.

Alabama Lawmaker Calls AV Law 'Successful' After Pornhub Withdrawal

Republican State Rep. Ben Robbins declared in a radio interview Wednesday that Pornhub’s decision to shut down access in Alabama indicates that the state’s new age verification law is “successful.”

New 'Digital Replicas' Law Protects California Performers

California Gov. Gavin Newsom has signed into law AB 2602, which regulates how digital replicas are addressed in personal and professional services contracts.

Lustery Adds AI Protection to Performer Contracts

Lustery has updated its performer contracts with a new clause ensuring that AI will not be used to create additional content featuring performers' likenesses, or to replace performers’ work without their consent.

Performers' Blacklisting Lawsuit Against Meta Dismissed by Judge

A federal judge in California dismissed this week the lawsuit filed by three performers in 2022 claiming that Meta conspired with OnlyFans to blacklist rival premium fan platforms’ talent.

U.S. House Revives Controversial KOSA in 2.0 Version

The U.S. House Committee on Energy and Commerce has advanced two internet regulation bills, including a vastly revised version of the controversial Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA), which had stalled after passing the Senate.

Show More