Australian Court Returns Laptops to The ‘ Infamous ‘ GTA V Cheat CreatorInfamous cheat maker is handed back his stuff to allow him to properly defend himself. The new court order extends the defense response date to 1st February 2019. PayPal freezing the defendant’s account imposes a freeze on the case. Christopher Anderson, a developer of a successful GTV V hack confiscated by the authorities in October, got his laptops backed by the Australian Federal Court’s numerous copyright infringement lawsuits in Australia and the United States. Special emphasis was applied to the particular case, as it was the first to enact such restraining and seizure measures against people who developed game cheats. Not only did the court order that all items relating to “Infamous” be checked and deleted, but they went to the point of limiting the amount of money the defendant could withdraw to the absolute minimum required. The court has now given Anderson a one-month extension to schedule his defense response but a freeze on the PayPal account continues to haunt the defendant’s case as it is expected to be lifted around March. It will be too late for him, but on that side the court couldn’t do anything to help even though they contacted PayPal on their own.