pedr
Explorer
There can be no extradition in a civil case. This is an entirely private matter between WotC and the defendants - the states concerned have no interest except as arbiters of the law and (where possible) enforcers of the judgment, which could only be an award of a sum of money in damages and/or an injunction prohibiting further violation. There is no requirement to show up for a trial, as far as I know - though failure to do so probably means you don't get to defend against the suit.
I know nothing about cross-jurisdictional civil claims - but it seems as if WotC have not yet made all of the defendants formally aware of the suits. I don't know at which point this could be a problem: the defendants have a right to know they are being sued, and to enter a defence.
How this could potentially interact with differences between Washington/US law and Polish law isn't clear to me - but I'd be very surprised if there was an automatic method of enforcing civil judgments made by US courts in Poland. It may be that, so long as the foreign defendants have no assets in the USA, they are effectively judgment-proof.
I know nothing about cross-jurisdictional civil claims - but it seems as if WotC have not yet made all of the defendants formally aware of the suits. I don't know at which point this could be a problem: the defendants have a right to know they are being sued, and to enter a defence.
How this could potentially interact with differences between Washington/US law and Polish law isn't clear to me - but I'd be very surprised if there was an automatic method of enforcing civil judgments made by US courts in Poland. It may be that, so long as the foreign defendants have no assets in the USA, they are effectively judgment-proof.