DirecTV alleges that Virginia resident Tony Amato made an “illegal purchase” of a Terminator Bootloader, a device DirecTV says has only one purpose: stealing DirecTV. Directv obtained Amato’s information through a mail raid of a shipping facility used by various technology merchants. DirecTV relies on shipping records, receipts, email communications, and unnamed “other records” gathered at this raid to show that Amato bought “Pirate Access Devices.” DirecTV alleged that Amato used the bootloader to intercept DirecTV, although DirecTV offers no direct evidence that Amato actually intercepted or even attempted to intercept the company’s satellite tv transmissions. Nevertheless, DirecTV accuses Amato of violating the Federal Communications Act, the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, and the Virginia Computer Crimes Act based on this speculation and Amato’s mere possession of the bootloader. DirecTV asks the court to stop Amato from possessing “Pirate Access Devices,” to force Amato to surrender all “Pirate Access Devices,” and to make Amato pay damages for allegedly stealing DirecTV.